Home / Resources and Writings / Weblog / Herbaria / A Rare Open House at Kew Herbarium

A Rare Open House at Kew Herbarium


Kew Herbarium and Library, founded by George Bentham and W. A. Broomfield in 1853, houses one of the world's largest collections of materials related to botany with over seven million dried plant specimens, 350,000 of which are "type specimens", the original specimens used to describe new species. The herbarium has the largest collection of historical dried plant specimens in the world, with contributers including Charles Darwin, Joseph Hooker and David Livingstone.

Normally open only to researchers by appointment, this weekend the herbarium will offer a rare chance to view the collections. As part of the Open House London weekend, the Kew Herbarium, Library and Archives will be open to the public from 10 am to 4 pm on September 17 and 18, 2005 . Admission is free.

Links:

Posted by Eric La Fountaine at 2:40 PM on September 12, 2005

Want to talk about this weblog entry? As of August 22, 2006, all new entries and most older entries are cross-posted to the UBC Botanical Garden Discussion Forums for discussion (you might need to use the search function to find the thread you are looking for).

This is an effort to reduce the amount of time spent dealing with spam (the forums are very good at stopping spam, the weblog commenting system is not so good).

Older entries already containing comments remain open for discussion.


Comments

Post a comment










Remember personal info?