Skip to content

Please be aware that some material may contain words, descriptions or illustrations which will not reflect current scientific understanding and may be considered in today's context inaccurate, unethical, offensive or distressing.

Description

Sectional Committee: Botany

Not recommended for publication in the 'Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society'. A valuable paper, but does not fit the scope of the Philosophical Transactions. No paper on systematic botany or zoology has been published by the Royal Society as far as the reviewer recalls. Joseph Dalton Hooker's papers on systematic botany were published by the Linnean Society.

[Published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society]

Endorsed on verso as received 30 October 1906.

Reference number
RR/17/50
Earliest possible date
October 1906
Physical description
Standardised form (type A)
Page extent
4 pages
Format
Manuscript

Creator name

Daniel Oliver

View page for Daniel Oliver

Use this record

Citation

Daniel Oliver, Referee's report by Daniel Oliver, on a paper 'On the Julianiaceae: a new natural order of plants' by William Botting Hemsley, October 1906, RR/17/50, The Royal Society Archives, London, https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/items/rr_17_50/referees-report-by-daniel-oliver-on-a-paper-on-the-julianiaceae-a-new-natural-order-of-plants-by-william-botting-hemsley, accessed on 16 September 2024

Link to this record

Embed this record

<iframe src="https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/embed/items/rr_17_50/referees-report-by-daniel-oliver-on-a-paper-on-the-julianiaceae-a-new-natural-order-of-plants-by-william-botting-hemsley" title="Referee's report by Daniel Oliver, on a paper 'On the Julianiaceae: a new natural order of plants' by William Botting Hemsley" allow="fullscreen" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="500px"></iframe>

Related Publications

Related Fellows

Explore the collection

  • Referee Reports

    Date: 1832-1949

    This collection contains reports on scientific papers submitted for publication to the Royal Society. Started in 1832 when the system was formalised, it is a record of the origins of peer review publishing in practice.

    View collection