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Medicinal plants walking tour Discover the medicinal properties of various plants, including those used in modern medicine and throughout history on this walking tour.
All summer long, Kew members and their guests can visit the Gardens from 8am. Escape the crowds and be the first to enjoy the ...
History of Kew Our Gardens date back to the early 18th century, as a royal palace to today's globally renowned scientific institution for plant and fungal research.
Margaret Mee: painting the Amazon Moonflower Journey into the heart of the Amazon through the eyes of the artist Margaret Mee in our latest display featuring gems from our Library, Archives, ...
Allium (Allium species) Hardy aloe (Aloe striatula) Peruvian lily (Alstroemeria) White sagebrush (Artemisia ludoviciana) King’s spear (Asphodeline lutea) White asphodel (Asphodelus albus) False ...
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Field maple (Acer campestre) Montpellier maple (Acer monspessulanum) Oriental hornbeam (Carpinus orientalis) Judas tree (Cercis siliquastrum) Cornelian cherry (Cornus mas) Broad-leaved cockspur thorn ...
I’m on a video call with Dr Lova Marline, a bryologist from Madagascar who has recently moved to the US to join Harvard ...
Visit the world-famous Kew Gardens Experience our beautiful botanic gardens and the most biodiverse place on Earth. Visit Kew Gardens ...
A passion for passion flowers Gerhard Prenner, researcher in plant morphology and anatomy, presents his recent ontogenetic study on one of the passion flowers, Passiflora lobata. He reveals insights ...
Pollen and pollinators in legumes Kew scientist Hannah Banks, a member of the Comparative Plant and Fungal Biology team, speculates on whether we can use pollen structure to predict which species are ...
A Botanical Miscellany? Digitising the Directors' Correspondence Directors' Correspondence digitiser, Kat Harrington looks at letters to Kew's first official Director, Sir William Jackson Hooker, sent ...
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