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Taxonomical and chorological notes 10 [PDF]

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Király Botond Gergely   +8 more
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Chorology of the Genera of Gramineae

Kew Bulletin, 1975
Plant geography aims to elucidate the distribution of the world's vegetation. It is, in fact, ecology on a global scale, being concerned with the integration of taxa into communities, and with explaining their occurrence in terms of environmental factors.
W D Clayton
exaly   +2 more sources

CHOROLOGY AND SPATIAL ANALYSIS

Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 1974
The chorological and spatial schools offer differing conceptions of the nature of geographic questions and the appropriate forms of explanation. Their differences have been exaggerated, however, and recent attempts at synthesis have been reconstructions of chorology from the spatial viewpoint.
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The Chorology of African Mountain Grasses

Kew Bulletin, 1976
The mountains of tropical Africa have for long held a fascination for phytogeographers. They occur as isolated massifs or single mountains scattered across the continent, with their summits towering high above the surrounding tropical countryside and reaching up into the temperate conditions of high altitudes like so many islands; Carlquist (1974 ...
W D Clayton
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Chorology

Barney Warf
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CHOROLOGY REVISITED – COMPUTERWISE

Professional Geographer, 1962
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The ecology and chorology of myxomycetes in Turkey

Mycotaxon, 2007
Myxomycete collections obtained between 1957-2006 from 18 floristic squares and 260 localities in Turkey represent 216 taxa from 39 genera and 12 families in the Myxomycota. The specimens were collected from 37 substrates including coniferous trees (six), broadleaf trees (30), and one highly decayed substrate that could not be identified.
Yagiz, Dursun, Afyon, Ahmet
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The Chorologic Aspect

Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers, 1940
A MODERN geography was altogether impossible until a little more than a century ago. From then on a succession of geographers has given us a conception of their discipline that should never be lost again. Only after the groundwork had been laid by geology, the natural sciences, and biology was it possible to arrive at what we call geography today.
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