7,668 research outputs found
Niels Hansen
Black and white photograph of a man identified as Niels M. Hansen standing on a lawn outside of an unidentified building. Niels is slightly turned to the right, away from the camera. He is wearing a dark suit and is holding a hat down by his side. The shadow of his legs is cast on the grass to his left. There are three windows on the building directly behind him
Margaret Hansen, Sister of Niels Hansen
Copy negative of a black and white portrait of a woman, Margaret Hansen, sitting outdoors in a chair with an open book on her lap. The chair on which she is sitting is situated in a yard, with a fence and a few trees visible behind it. She is wearing a long-sleeved dress and has her hair pulled back. According to accompanying information, Margaret is the sister of Niels Hansen
Niels and Emma Hansen
Copy negative of a black and white photograph of a husband and a wife, identified as Niels and Emma Hansen, standing in front of their home. Niels is wearing a hat, a white shirt, a tie, and pants with suspenders; he has his hand to his hips as if to hold his pants up. To his right, Emma is standing and wearing a white dress and a hat. She is holding a purse up to her chest. The porch and door of their house are visible directly behind them
Primulaceae Vent. Primula. Plant specimen collected by N.E. Hansen, 1924
Primulaceae Vent. Primula. Plant specimen collected by N.E. Hansen, 1924. N.E. Hansen (1866-1950) was a Danish-American horticulturist and botanist who was a pioneer in plant breeding. Hansen came to South Dakota in 1895 and became the first head of the Horticultural Department of South Dakota State College. He also served as agricultural explorer for the United States Department of Agriculture. He searched for hardy grasses, fruits, and other plants throughout Europe and Asia and brought them back to the United States to raise or crossbreed with American varieties to produce hardy plants
N.E. Hansen in a rickshaw in northern China in 1924
N.E. Hansen and another man are sitting in rickshaws while Hansen was on the hunt for pears in northern China, there are several children surrounding them; written in pencil on the back: 1924 Hunting for Pears Niels Hansen north Chin
N.E. Hansen in a rickshaw in northern China in 1924
N.E. Hansen and another man are sitting in rickshaws while Hansen was on the hunt for pears in northern China, there are several children surrounding them; written in pencil on the back: 1924 Hunting for Pears Niels Hansen north Chinahttps://openprairie.sdstate.edu/dc_Hansen/1083/thumbnail.jp
Niels Hansen Family
Copy negative of a black and white photograph of a family posed for a portrait in front of the house of their patriarch, Niels Hansen. There are 14 people in all; 7 are men, 5 are women, and 2 are a young boy and a young girl. They are arranged in several rows in front of a small, wire-fenced garden that is visible behind their legs. Two sets of windows are discernible directly behind them
Niels E. Hansen: Plant Explorer
At the age of seventeen, Niels Ebbesen Hansen enrolled at Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, where he met Professor J. L. Budd, head of the Department of Horticulture and a creative and inspiring person. This meeting with Professor Budd eventually caused young Hansen to major in horticulture, and plant exploration and development became his lifework. He graduated in 1887 from Iowa State and for the next four years worked in large commercial nurseries in Iowa. This experience, not only supplemented his previous theoretical training in college but gave him an invaluable insight into the problems of northwestern horticulture
Mellem rejseroman og udviklingsroman: - en læsning af Holbergs Niels Klim
Søren Peter Hansen om Holbergs Niels Klim
Rosaceae B. Juss. Micromeles alnifolia Koehne. Plant specimen collected by N.E. Hansen, 1924
Rosaceae B. Juss. Micromeles alnifolia Koehne. Plant specimen collected by N.E. Hansen, 1924. N.E. Hansen (1866-1950) was a Danish-American horticulturist and botanist who was a pioneer in plant breeding. Hansen came to South Dakota in 1895 and became the first head of the Horticultural Department of South Dakota State College. He also served as agricultural explorer for the United States Department of Agriculture. He searched for hardy grasses, fruits, and other plants throughout Europe and Asia and brought them back to the United States to raise or crossbreed with American varieties to produce hardy plants. Specimen is mounted on an 11.5 x 16.5 inch herbarium sheet accompanied by a label printed in Russian in Cyrillic letter with hand-written notation in blank ink
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