
A Confusion of Names
Timothy Walker reveals how the work of Carl Linnaeus, Phillip Miller and John Ray unlocked the mysteries of the plant kingdom and created the science of botany.
What makes plants grow is a simple enough question. The answer turns out to be one of the most complicated and fascinating stories in science and took over 300 years to unravel.
Timothy Walker, director of Oxford University Botanic Garden, reveals how the breakthroughs of Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus, Chelsea gardener Phillip Miller and English naturalist John Ray created the science of botany. Between them, these quirky, temperamental characters unlocked the mysteries of the plant kingdom, and they began to glimpse a world where bigger, better and stronger plants could be created. Nurseryman Thomas Fairchild created the world's first artificial hybrid flower - an entirely new plant that didn't exist in nature.
Today, botanists continue the search for new flowers, better crops and improved medicines to treat life-threatening diseases.
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Clips
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Thomas Fairchild - speciation and evolution
Duration: 06:43
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Linnaeus and the first system of classification of plants
Duration: 03:21
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The binomial system of classification
Duration: 04:52
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Classification techniques and the search for useful plants
Duration: 04:36
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Timothy Walker |
| Producer | Chris Salt |
| Series Producer | Paul Overton |
| Series Producer | Graeme Thomson |
Broadcasts
- Tue 7 Jun 201121:00
- Wed 8 Jun 201100:35
- Wed 8 Jun 201103:05
- Sat 11 Jun 201122:25
- Tue 24 Jan 201220:00
- Wed 25 Jan 201201:15
- Thu 10 Apr 201420:00
- Tue 1 Dec 201501:20
- Tue 2 May 201700:30
- Thu 16 May 201923:15
- Wed 24 Aug 202219:00
- Thu 25 Aug 202202:00



