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- ...] '''5.3.5''' [[Macroeconomics]] '''5.3.6''' [[Economic planning|Economic Growth and Planning]] | || || Life on Earth || Emeritus Professor of Botany, [[Harvard University]] || 2041 KB (5,585 words) - 12:32, 19 September 2010
- ...caceae|palms]] and large bamboos, to be columnar rather than tapering.<ref>Botany; Wilson,C.L. and Loomis,W.E. Third edition. Holt, Rinehart and Winston</ref Bamboos are of notable economic and cultural significance in [[East Asia]] and [[South East Asia]], being u47 KB (7,158 words) - 09:22, 20 September 2010
- Heartwood (or old [[xylem]]) is wood that, as a result of [[Tylosis (Botany)|tylosis]], has become more resistant to decay. Tylosis is the deposition ...se, [[bamboo]], botanically a member of the grass family, has considerable economic importance, larger culms being widely used as a building and construction m41 KB (6,609 words) - 09:24, 20 September 2010
- | journal = Economic Botany50 KB (6,686 words) - 21:09, 21 September 2010
- ...of Cannabis in Eastern Asia: Linguistic-Cultural Implications", ''Economic Botany'' 28.3:293-301, p. 296.</ref> The (ca. 730) dietary therapy book ''Shiliao ...An Archaeological and Historical Account of Cannabis in China", ''Economic Botany'' 28.4:437-448, p. 446.</ref></blockquote>31 KB (4,658 words) - 21:10, 21 September 2010
- ...of Cannabis in Eastern Asia: Linguistic-Cultural Implications", ''Economic Botany'' 28.3:293-301, p. 294.</ref> and the (ca. 3rd century BCE) ''[[Erya]]'' di ...Morphological variation of achenes of ''Cannabis''. ''Canadian Journal of Botany'' '''53'''(10): 978-987.</ref> Most strains of ''Cannabis'' are [[Photoperi76 KB (10,798 words) - 21:10, 21 September 2010
- ==Botany== ...have no [[trichome|hairs]] on either surface, and little or no [[Petiole (botany)|petiole]].<ref name="Valdes1987"/> The plant grows to well over {{convert|133 KB (18,241 words) - 21:14, 21 September 2010
- * Stimulates [[epinasty]] – leaf [[Petiole (botany)|petiole]] grows out, leaf hangs down and curls into itself * Induces a [[climacteric (botany)|climacteric]] rise in {{dn|respiration}} in some fruit which causes a rele32 KB (4,462 words) - 20:01, 24 September 2010
- | author=Economic Research Service ...or=Franklin W. Martin|volume=36|year=1982|pages=340–345|journal=Economic Botany}}</ref>58 KB (8,794 words) - 18:39, 13 October 2010