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2006-10-02 09:39:46 · 5 answers · asked by Lori-Ann C 1 in Science & Mathematics Botany

5 answers

American Journal of Botany... you can typically get abstracts and can pay for the papers if you really want the paper.

http://www.amjbot.org/

If you are a college student, you should be able to access the journal for FREE (if your university subscribes to that journal). I used to get a lot of journal articles for free at the university I attended, it was great! You probably have to login to the libraries site, then search for the journal.

2006-10-02 10:13:38 · answer #1 · answered by plantmd 4 · 0 0

There are numerous botanical journals, so it depends on what you want to find. Most journals make at least the abstracts available and, as noted by one of the others, often charge for the full paper (but you can usually get them for free if you are in college because they have electronic subscriptions). You should search on the topic you are interested in, using Google or Google Scholar, locate the papers you are interested in and either search for the journal site or follow the links.

2006-10-02 15:42:52 · answer #2 · answered by myrtguy 5 · 0 0

Try the Botanical Society of America website, www.botany.org

2006-10-02 09:47:39 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

wake and volpe the two: the two one in each and every of you're misusing the words concept and hypothesis. for starters, in technological know-how, there is not any such factor as a 'certainty'. we in simple terms call issues a certainty whilst its probably pointless to argue that the winning concept is incorrect. to define: a hypothesis is an untested proposition that tries to describe the internal working in the back of a organic phenomenon (opposite to what volpe seems to think of, simply by fact he's a creationist together with his head up his *** who prefers to avert certainty by skill of hiding in language discrepancies) it extremely is frequently the term given until now any medical undertaking is taken up on a particular merchandise of pastime. if its organic hypothesis according to an informed wager, its hypothetical. a concept, in assessment, is a hypothesis that has been thoroughly examined and has yet to be disproven. there are various ranges of ways enterprise a concept is and it relies upon on how plenty finding out has been accomplished to disprove the belief. evolution, as a concept, is placed by consistent scrutiny (fantastically simply by fact the greater youthful earth creationists think of its such bullshit) and has yet to be disproven, to that end it holds alot of weight interior the medical community. as for the belief of gravity, gravity isn't a concept, its what we regrettably call 'a regulation'. we are able to work out gravity, and all of us know that its proportional to the hundreds of the products in contact in gravity, and inversely proportional to their distance aside, yet it extremely is an commentary, no longer a concept. no ones extremely effective what motives gravity, which skill we dont have any extremely reliable theories to describe the underlying clarification for our observations. a tragedy of modern language (and a persevering with attacking factor for head-in-*** creationists) is that for the duration of colloquial english, 'concept' is used to describe what a scientist might call a hypothesis. this means those that arent scientists or dont study books (they have been invented a pair thousand years in the past volpe, seem into them), have self belief that the belief of evolution skill no longer even scientists have self belief this loopy concept. p.s. raccoon female's article link reads like it replace into written by skill of a 9 3 hundred and sixty 5 days previous and has great obtrusive blunders. why can no longer creationists use nicely articles to show their factor? (oh perfect, simply by fact thats no longer achievable ;)

2016-12-12 19:14:53 · answer #4 · answered by shery 4 · 0 0

http://scholar.google.com/

Just use keywords to find what you want. Not all "free" articles though.

2006-10-02 09:53:36 · answer #5 · answered by Nesbitt 2 · 0 0

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