Rabu, 29 Juli 2009

Historia Naturalis Palmarum

The Natural History of Palm Trees



Attalea - Cocos - Sabal species


Borassus flabelliformis


Acrocomia sclerocarpa


Areca nibung


Astrocaryum species


Palm species


Palm species sections


Palm species sections a


Bactris longipos + Cocos botryophora


Ceratolobus glaucescens


Copernica ceifera


Daemonorops melanochaetes


Thrinax brasiliensis


Zalacca wallichiana


Desmoncus polyacanthos


Elaeis melanococca


Livistona humilis


Livistona humilis (fruit + seeds)



Sagus taedigera


Eugeisona tristis


Eugeisona tristis (detail)


palm symmetry


Plectocomia khasiyana


"The author of over 150 botanical titles, including the great flora of Brazil, Karl Friedrich Philipp von Martius also wrote the still-definitive three-volume treatise on the palm family, one of the first plant monographs. He developed his life-long fascination with palms during an expedition through Brazil [map] from 1817 to 1820, and he worked nearly 30 years to prepare this grand summation, including palms found only as fossils." [source]

All three volumes of 'Historia Naturalis Palmarum' are available at the Botanicus website from the Missouri Botanical Gardens. This lavishly illustrated series included systematic descriptions of all known species in the palm family (Arecaceae). The illustrations were produced by Martius himself and Ferdinand Bauer (among others).

You can get an idea of how enormous the available jp2 image files of each chromolithograph are by clicking on those couple of illustration details towards the end of the sampling above. [each image file is about 3Mb and converts to ~20Mb jpeg files] Mouse over the images - taken from all three volumes - for the botanical names (in most cases).

Historia Naturalis Palmarum

The Natural History of Palm Trees



Attalea - Cocos - Sabal species


Borassus flabelliformis


Acrocomia sclerocarpa


Areca nibung


Astrocaryum species


Palm species


Palm species sections


Palm species sections a


Bactris longipos + Cocos botryophora


Ceratolobus glaucescens


Copernica ceifera


Daemonorops melanochaetes


Thrinax brasiliensis


Zalacca wallichiana


Desmoncus polyacanthos


Elaeis melanococca


Livistona humilis


Livistona humilis (fruit + seeds)



Sagus taedigera


Eugeisona tristis


Eugeisona tristis (detail)


palm symmetry


Plectocomia khasiyana


"The author of over 150 botanical titles, including the great flora of Brazil, Karl Friedrich Philipp von Martius also wrote the still-definitive three-volume treatise on the palm family, one of the first plant monographs. He developed his life-long fascination with palms during an expedition through Brazil [map] from 1817 to 1820, and he worked nearly 30 years to prepare this grand summation, including palms found only as fossils." [source]

All three volumes of 'Historia Naturalis Palmarum' are available at the Botanicus website from the Missouri Botanical Gardens. This lavishly illustrated series included systematic descriptions of all known species in the palm family (Arecaceae). The illustrations were produced by Martius himself and Ferdinand Bauer (among others).

You can get an idea of how enormous the available jp2 image files of each chromolithograph are by clicking on those couple of illustration details towards the end of the sampling above. [each image file is about 3Mb and converts to ~20Mb jpeg files] Mouse over the images - taken from all three volumes - for the botanical names (in most cases).

Senin, 27 Juli 2009

Celtic Designs

Celtic Design 005


Celtic Design 011


Celtic Design 014


Celtic Design 016


Celtic Design 019


Celtic Design 022


Celtic Design 025


Celtic Design 026


Celtic Design 028


Celtic Design 032


Celtic Design 033


Celtic Design 035


Celtic Design 037


Celtic Design 039


Celtic Design 041


Celtic Design 043


Celtic Design 045


Celtic Design 047


Celtic Design 049


Celtic Design 050


The images above (many are details) come from three books :


** Early Celtic Designs by I Stead & K Hughes, from the British Museum Pattern Books


** A Treasury of Celtic Design by C Davis.


** Celtic Borders & Motifs by L Davies from Design Source Books.



In a general sense, if anyone wants to follow my admittedly erratic web habits in relation to BibliOdyssey:
Twitter updates are the fastest means of notification; delicious bookmarks [feed] give a summary of each post and it's usually updated soon after the post appears; the blog rss feed appears an hour or so later; email subscription is sloooow: up to a day after the post appears on the site; I usually add a few items of interest to the shared feeds most days and now and then I save bookmarks of bookish/exhibition material to the peacay delicious account [feed] - there is a wealth of interesting material in there.