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10 - Wanted Weeds: Environmental History in the Whipple Museum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 August 2019

Joshua Nall
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Liba Taub
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Frances Willmoth
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge

Summary

This essay uses a recent acquisition by the Whipple, a seed herbarium called ‘The Origin of Seeds Source Indicators’, to explore the curious history of the global trade in commercial seed stocks in the early twentieth century. Little was known about this seed collection when the Whipple Museum acquired it. There was no place or date of creation, no record of its ownership, and, most pressingly, no knowledge of the uses for which it had been intended. Investigating this enigmatic object exposed the intriguing link between weeds, seeds, and commercial forage stocks in an increasingly international seed market, as well as the many challenges of using laboratory instrumentation to try and manage the tumult of international agricultural exchange.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 10.2 A seed analyst weeds out the impurities from a sample of red clover.

From B. O. Longyear, ‘Seed Testing for Farmers’, Michigan State Agricultural College Experiment Station Bulletin, no. 212 (April 1904), p. 4. Widener Library, Harvard University, HD Sci 1635.15.3.
Figure 1

Figure 10.3 This 1906 reference collection of ‘economic plants’ includes both crop and weed seeds of Canada.

Reproduced courtesy of the Nova Scotia Museum Botany Collection, Nova Scotia Archives (Harry Piers accession number 3058).

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