Something interesting posted earlier.
Dr Satish Phadke

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Satish Phadke <[email protected]>
Date: 3 October 2010 16:45
Subject: Floral clock
To: indiantreepix <[email protected]>


Something interesting from History
Ref. A book "FLOWER HUNTERS" by Mary Gribbin and John Gribbin

Carl Linnaeus had observed the time that flowers capable of growing in
Sweden opened and closed each day and he devised a plan which arranged
plants opening and closing at different times of day so enabling him to
plant a 'floral clock' that could (hopefully) determine the time accurately
within half an hour.
There is no record of Linnaeus actually managing to cultivate such a clock,
and the idea, which he published in *Philosophica botanica* in 1751, may
well have been theoretical rather than practical garden project.
He backed from the idea for his son Carl Linnaeus,who began to write a
paper on the same project.
This thesis (*Horologium Plantarium*)was never completed and Carl seem to
have become disenchanted by the idea.

Some references on Net
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A5170024
http://ces.iisc.ernet.in/hpg/envis/doc28.html

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