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 |
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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 | WIKI |
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. | WIKI |
Botany Centre and Tanglin Gate[edit] | WIKI |
Office Building (Botany Hall 1) at the redeveloped Tanglin Core | WIKI |
The two new blocks of offices and classroom in the upgraded Tanglin Core area are known as the Botany Centre. | WIKI |
Library of Botany and Horticulture (including the Public Reference Centre); the Singapore Herbarium (International acronym: Herb. | WIKI |
The corridors and walkways of the Botany Centre are covered by leaf imprints. | WIKI |
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. | WIKI |
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. | UNESCO |
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. | UNESCO |