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Agnes Ibbetson (1757–1823), vegetable physiologist, daughter of Andrew Thomson Esq., of Roehampton, a London merchant, and was born in London in 1757 and educated at home. In 1783 she married James Ibbetson at Bushey in Hertfordshire. He was the eldest son the Rev. James Ibbetson D.D., rector of Bushey and Archdeacon of St. Albans. James, junior, was a barrister and amateur antiquary who had been admitted to Lincoln's Inn in 1771, but he died in 1790 aged 35 leaving Anges as young widow. Sometime after James's death she moved to Devon where she lived for the rest of her life. She died in February 1823 in Exmouth, aged 66. Her nephew was Charles Poulett Thomson, who was a politician and become the first Governor of Canada, being raised to the peerage as Baron Syndenham. Between 1809 and 1822 Mrs. Ibbetson contributed more than fifty papers to ''Nicholson's Journal'' and the ''Philosophical Magazine'' on the microscopic structure and physiology of plants, including such subjects as air-vessels, pollen, perspiration, sleep, winter-buds, grafting, impregnation, germination, and the Jussieuean method. In the botanical department of the British Museum are preserved some specimens of woods and microscopic slides prepared by her, with a manuscript description stating that they represent twenty-four years' work, and illustrating her erroneous belief that buds originate endogenously and force their way outward. The leguminous genus ''Ibbetsonia'' was dedicated to her by John Sims, but is now considered identical with the ''Cyclopia'' of Ventenat. ==References== ;Attribution 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Agnes Ibbetson」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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