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  1. Cultivating famine: data, experimentation and food security, 1795–1848.John Lidwell-Durnin - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Science 53 (2):159-181.
    Collecting seeds and specimens was an integral aspect of botany and natural history in the eighteenth century. Historians have until recently paid less attention to the importance of collecting, trading and compiling knowledge of their cultivation, but knowing how to grow and maintain plants free from disease was crucial to agricultural and botanical projects. This is particularly true in the case of food security. At the close of the eighteenth century, European diets (particularly among the poor) began shifting from wheat- (...)
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  • Principles and biological concepts of heredity before Mendel.Péter Poczai & Jorge A. Santiago-Blay - 2021 - Biology Direct 16.
    The knowledge of the history of a subject stimulates understanding. As we study how other people have made scientific breakthroughs, we develop the breadth of imagination that would inspire us to make new discoveries of our own. This perspective certainly applies to the teaching of genetics as hallmarked by the pea experiments of Mendel. Common questions students have in reading Mendel’s paper for the first time is how it compares to other botanical, agricultural, and biological texts from the early and (...)
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