Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Singapore Botanic Gardens' has mentioned 'Botany' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 History 1.1 1859xe2x80x931876 1.2 1877xe2x80x931920s 1.3 1920sxe2x80x931985 1.4 1986xe2x80x93present 2 Attractions 2.1 National Orchid Garden 2.2 Rainforest 2.3 Ginger Garden 2.4 Botany Centre and Tanglin Gate 2.5 Jacob Ballas Children's Garden 2.6 Other attractions 3 UNESCO 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External links
Tanaka returned to Japan in July 1943, and Dr. Kwan Koriba (xe9x83xa1xe5xa0xb4xe5xafx9b), a retired professor of botany from the Kyoto Imperial University and secretary-general of the Imperial Japanese Army's Malayan military administration department's general affairs department, was appointed director to the Gardens and Museum, posts he held until the end of the war.
Botany Centre and Tanglin Gate[edit]
Office Building (Botany Hall 1) at the redeveloped Tanglin Core
The two new blocks of offices and classroom in the upgraded Tanglin Core area are known as the Botany Centre.
Library of Botany and Horticulture (including the Public Reference Centre); the Singapore Herbarium (International acronym: Herb.
The corridors and walkways of the Botany Centre are covered by leaf imprints.
The Tembusu tree (Faraea fragrans) featured on the reverse of the Singaporean five-dollar bill at Lawn E, Singapore Botanic Gardens Dendrobium Margaret Thatcher The Yuen-Peng McNeice Bromeliad Collection Dendrobium Bae Yong-joon, an orchid cultivar named after the South Korean actor Vanda Miss Joaquim, the national flower of Singapore Cygnus atratus in the Eco-Lake The Sun Garden (formerly known as the Sun Rockery) Flight of Swans sculpture installed in May 2006 at Swan Lake The Botany Centre Blocks, with a view of Calophyllum inophyllum and one of the wooden sculptures dotted around the complex.
Through its well-preserved landscape design and continuity of purpose, the Singapore Botanic Gardens is an outstanding example of a British tropical botanic garden which has also played a key role in advances in scientific knowledge, particularly in the fields of tropical botany and horticulture, including the development of plantation rubber.
Criterion (ii): The Singapore Botanic Gardens has been a centre for plant research in Southeast Asia since the 19th century, contributing significantly to the expansion of plantation rubber in the 20th century, and continues to play a leading role in the exchange of ideas, knowledge and expertise in tropical botany and horticultural sciences.