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Gods and Goddesses in the Garden: Greco-Roman Mythology and the Scientific Names of Plants
 
 
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Gods and Goddesses in the Garden: Greco-Roman Mythology and the Scientific Names of Plants [Hardcover]

Prof. Peter Bernhardt (Author)

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Book Description

March 11, 2008
Zeus, Medusa, Hercules, Aphrodite. Did you know that these and other dynamic deities, heroes, and monsters of Greek and Roman mythology live on in the names of trees and flowers? Some grow in your local woodlands or right in your own backyard garden.

In this delightful book, botanist Peter Bernhardt reveals the rich history and mythology that underlie the origins of many scientific plant names. Unlike other books about botanical taxonomy that take the form of heavy and intimidating lexicons, Bernhardt's account comes together in a series of interlocking stories. Each chapter opens with a short version of a classical myth, then links the tale to plant names, showing how each plant "resembles" its mythological counterpart with regard to its history, anatomy, life cycle, and conservation. You will learn, for example, that as our garden acanthus wears nasty spines along its leaf margins, it is named for the nymph who scratched the face of Apollo. The shape-shifting god, Proteus, gives his name to a whole family of shrubs and trees that produce colorful flowering branches in an astonishing number of sizes and shapes.

Amateur and professional gardeners, high school teachers and professors of biology, botanists and conservationists alike will appreciate this book's entertaining and informative entry to the otherwise daunting field of botanical names. Engaging, witty, and memorable, Gods and Goddesses in the Garden transcends the genre of natural history and makes taxonomy a topic equally at home in the classroom and at cocktail parties.


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Customers buy this book with Folklore and Symbolism of Flowers, Plants and Trees (Dover Pictorial Archive) $10.36

Gods and Goddesses in the Garden: Greco-Roman Mythology and the Scientific Names of Plants + Folklore and Symbolism of Flowers, Plants and Trees (Dover Pictorial Archive)
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Bernhardt is an expert botanist, mythologist and writer-he will bring your garden to life
(Meg Lowman author in Life in the Treetops and It's a Jungle Up There )

This is the reference guide on the origins of plant names based on classical mythology.
(Robbin Moran The New York Botanical Garden )

About the Author

Peter Bernhardt is a professor of botany at St. Louis University, a research associate at the Missouri Botanical Gardens, and a fellow of the Royal Botanical Gardens in Sydney, Australia. He is the author of several books, including The Rose's Kiss: A Natural History of Flowers.

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More About the Author

Peter Bernhardt was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1952 and grew up on Long Island. His interest in natural history developed thanks to the woodland reserve two blocks from his house separating the towns of Merrick and Freeport, his summer attendance at Meroke Day Camp and the influence of local plant breeder and garden designer, the late Joseph Reis. His indulgent parents allowed Peter to keep many small pets (birds, tropical fish, newts, turtles) as well as pots of cacti and succulents. His 1974 BA in Biology came from the State University of New York at Oswego and Peter credits his first attempt at botanical research (a project on how prickly pear cacti grow spines) to Professor James Seago. After taking his Masters Degree in Biology from the State University of New York at Brockport in 1975 Peter spent over two years in Peace Corps at the University of El Salvador in Central America collecting plants for the university's herbarium (plant museum), teaching undergraduate courses and conducting field studies on the pollination of the Gabriel flower (Echeandia macrocarpa). His first popular article on how wild orchids street trees and telephone poles in the city of San Salvador appeared in "Natural History Magazine." After a few months as a technician at the New York Botanical Garden in 1977 he was contributing articles to their now defunct magazine, "Garden." By 1977 he accepted a doctoral scholarship at the University of Melbourne, Australia, where he studied the breeding systems of box mistletoes (Amyema) under Malcolm Calder and the late Bruce Knox. He remains a Professor of Biology at Saint Louis University, Missouri (see his web page at the SLU Department of Biology) and a Research Associate of both the Missouri Botanical Garden (St. Louis) and the Royal Botanic Gardens of Sydney (Sydney, N.S.W., Australia). His fieldwork in pollination biology takes him to Kansas, Missouri and Oregon and abroad to Australia, Israel and China. A sabbatical in 2009 took him back to Australia where he and Retha Meier studied how blue sun orchids (Thelymitra) are pollinated by native bees and why blue-flowered species often hybridize with each other or with the yellow lemon orchid (Thelytmitra antennifera). Consequently, Dr. Bernhardt's books on plant life are often based on real experiences he's enjoyed in the field, the laboratory and his own home garden.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
maritime squill, mortal monarchs, root collectors, celery family, rocket larkspur, lip petal, wildflower books, plant taxonomists, most taxonomists, daisy family, larger genus, lateral petals, monkey grass
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
North America, United States, South America, Missouri Botanical Garden, John Lindley, The Greeks, The Romans, Mother Earth, The Gods of Olympus, The Triumph of Zeus, Old World, Middle East, Central America, New Zealand, Pliny the Elder, John Myers, Paxton's Flower Garden, Charles Darwin, Cape of Good Hope, Princess Andromeda, New World, Trojan War, Canary Islands, David Don, Helen of Troy
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