Guided Tour of Cambridge University Botanic Garden
- π€ Speaker: Guided Tour
- π Date & Time: Thursday 10 June 2010, 18:30 - 20:30
- π Venue: Cambridge University Botanic Garden
Abstract
A chance to visit the delightful Cambridge University Botanic Garden in early summer.
The Botanic Garden was established as a University teaching and research resource by Professor John Stevens Henslow. It was opened to the public in 1846. Henslow, who inspired his pupil Charles Darwin with a love of natural science, recognised the need to study plants in their own right. He was convinced that trees were the most important plants in the world and these form the framework of the Garden. With a framework of mature trees and shrubs, this paradise of plants comprises diverse, superbly landscaped settings including: the Rock Garden, representing the alpine plants from the mountains of every continent; the Lake and Water Garden, teeming with bird life; tropical rainforest, the alpine house and seasonal displays in the Glasshouses; and the historic Systematic Beds, displaying 1600 hardy representatives of more than 80 families of flowering plants. See www.botanic.cam.ac.uk for general information, directions and map.
LIMITED NUMBERS . TICKETS MUST BE RESERVED BY CONTACTING ORGANISERS .
Meet at the new Brookside Gate entrance (just off Trumpington Road), Bateman Street, Cambridge CB2 1JF .
Series This talk is part of the SCI Cambridge Science Talks series.
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Guided Tour
Thursday 10 June 2010, 18:30-20:30