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Flora Indica : Being a Systematic Account of the Plants of British India, Together with Observations on the Structure and Affinities of their Natural Order and Genera

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Botany and Horticulture series
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Sir Joseph Hooker (1817–1911) was one of the greatest British botanists and explorers of the nineteenth century.

He succeeded his father, Sir William Jackson Hooker, as Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and was a close friend and supporter of Charles Darwin.

His journey to the Himalayas and India, during which he collected some 7,000 species, was undertaken between 1847 and 1851 to increase the Kew collections; his account of the expedition (also reissued in this series) was dedicated to Darwin.

In 1855 he published Flora Indica with his fellow-traveller Thomas Thomson, who became Superintendent of the East India Company's Botanic Garden at Calcutta.

Lack of support from the Company meant that only the first volume of a projected series was published.

However, the introductory essay on the geographical relations of India's flora is considered to be one of Hooker's most important statements on biogeographical issues.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108037496 / 9781108037495
Paperback / softback
581.954
08/12/2011
United Kingdom
592 pages, 2 Maps
140 x 216 mm, 740 grams