Showing 13 results

Finding Aid
Folder Trifolium
Print preview Hierarchy View:

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium alpestre

  • UA 53.4:B08-F04
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0134

  1. A wild clover from Samara province, of the Volga River region of eastern Russia. Some authorities call this trifolium medium. It is highly regarded as a drought-resistant clover for dry steppes where it is found native.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium elegans (?)

  • UA 53.4:B08-F02
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0093

  1. The species may be Alpestre. The native red clover from Vyatka, near Perm in the northern Volga River section of eastern Russia. This is about 58 degrees. A drought-resistance steppe clover.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium filiforme

  • UA 53.4:B08-F07
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0142

  1. A native clover from the RazN POCINXW. Worthy of trial although not especially promising The present seed is the third or fourth generation at Moscow in the hands of Prof. Williams.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium Lupinaster

  • UA 53.4:B08-F03
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0118

  1. A NATIVE CLOVER FROM THE DRY STEPPES OF TOBOL’SK, WESTERN Siberia, where it endures -40 degrees F. The seeds should be scratched with sand or by the Svalof clover scratching method to insure germination the first year. Otherwise many of the seeds will not germinate until the second year.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium medium

  • UA 53.4:B08-F05
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0138

  1. Seed originally selected from one plant of a will steppe clover from the Razah province, Volga River region, central eastern Russia. Seed selected by Prof. Williams, Moscow agricultural college.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium pratense

  • UA 53.4:B08-F29
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0252

  1. The Toten clover which is cultivated over large areas of Norway on account of its extreme hardiness. It is descended from a wild plant found at Toten, Norway, by a peasant in about 1850. This form has sometimes been called “Trifolium pratense Norvegica”.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium pratense

  • UA 53.4:B08-F25
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0217

  1. The wild red clover as found in the dry steppes at Sarapul, Vyatka province of the norther Volga Riber region, of eastern Russia. Sarapul is about 56 degrees 25’ north latitude.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium pratense

  • UA 53.4:B08-F30
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0253

  1. The Norwegian red clover, No. 439 of A. Michelet, Christiana, Norway. The agronomists of Norway claim that the native red clover is hardier than that introduced from America, and the plant is much smoother. I found the same claim as to greater freedom from hairiness of plant, causing the hay to be freer from dust, made for the native red clovers of Finland and Russia.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium pratensis

  • UA 53.4:B08-F08
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0143

  1. The wild red clover from Ufa province of the Volga River region, Russia. This seed came from the Sterlitamak and Ufa provinces, have been found to be the est forms of the Russian red clover.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium sp.

  • UA 53.4:B08-F26
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0226

  1. Seed of a wild clover gathered when the plants were frozen on moist soil near Irkutsk, on Lake Baikal, eastern Siberia.

SDSU: Plant Specimens - Trifolium sp.

  • UA 53.4:B08-F27
  • Folder
  • 1890s-1920s circa
  • Part of N.E. Hansen

UA053-004-3D-0227

  1. A wild red clover from the Samara province of the northern Volga River region of eastern Russia. Allied to the common red clover but not of the same species.