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  1. Aug 25, 2015 · In the second half of 19 th century these principles of plant nutrition have been revisited through rigorous experimenting by Julius von Sachs. It was Sachs who first showed that plants actually do not need soil but the minerals derived from it. 4 This has been the starting point of the use of hydroponics for growing plants. Hydroponics is ...

  2. JULIUS VON SACHS PROFESSOR OF BOTANY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF WÜRZBURG. AUTHORISED TRANSLATION. BY HENRY E. F. GARNSEY, M.A. Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. REVISED BY ISAAC BAYLEY BALFOUR, M.A., M.D., F.R.S. Professor of Botany in the University And Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh. Oxford AT THE CLARENDON PRESS 1890 [All rights ...

  3. Sachs, Julius Von 1832-1897. Julius Sachs, the outstanding German botanist and plant physiologist, was born in Breslau in 1837. He left school in 1851 and became assistant to the physiologist J.E. Purkinje at Prague. In 1856 he received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and established himself as Privatdozent for plant physiology in the same ...

  4. The year 2018 marks the 150th anniversary of the first publication of Julius von Sachs' (1832–1897) Lehrbuch der Botanik (Textbook of Botany), which provided a comprehensive summary of what was ...

  5. Julius von Sachs (tiếng Đức: [zaks]; 2 tháng 10 năm 1832 - 29 tháng 5 năm 1897) là một nhà thực vật học người Đức đến từ Breslau, Phổ Silesia. Ông là một nhân vật nổi tiếng trong lịch sử thực vật học. Tiểu sử. Sachs sinh ra tại Breslau vào ngày 2 tháng 10 năm 1832.

  6. Sachs' works were originally published in German. Only English translations are listed here. Text-book of botany, morphological and physiological (1875), translated by Alfred William Bennett

  7. Oct 2, 2019 · In 1868, Sachs became Head of the botanical institute at Würzburg University. Sachs was a good friend of Frank Darwin. When Darwin needed a lab to conduct his experiments on plants growing toward the light, he naturally used the world-class lab of his friend, Julius von Sachs, at Würzburg U. Sachs himself was studying how plants process light.

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