[109876] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Your guide to removing the pain in 7 days or less
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (The Gout Code)
Tue Oct 16 14:45:19 2018
Date: Tue, 16 Oct 2018 20:45:18 +0200
From: "The Gout Code" <enlightenment@harpsecret.us>
Reply-To: "The Gout Code" <assist@harpsecret.us>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
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Your guide to removing the pain in 7 days or less
http://harpsecret.us/t0xWGUSsIwuZwrxFJhurE3snWaZPHUb-_PvdDSjVaOtVdFvM
http://harpsecret.us/XlAs5R_f4yBuE-SYyQE3zV6YwxH5nhWZWRnBen-g9StL23rD
rom their parent.
ary.
In some basal angiosperm lineages, Degeneriaceae and Winteraceae, a carpel begins as a shallow cup where the ovules develop with laminar placentation, on the upper surface of the carpel. The carpel eventually forms a folded, leaf-like structure, not fully sealed at its margins. No style exists, but a broad stigmatic crest along the margin allows pollen tubes access along the surface and between hairs at the margins.
Two kinds of fusion have been distinguished: postgenital fusion that can be observed during the development of flowers, and congenital fusion that cannot be observed i.e., fusions that occurred during phylogeny. But it is very difficult to distinguish fusion and non-fusion processes in the evolution of flowering plants. Some processes that have been considered congenital (phylogenetic) fusions appear to be non-fusion processes such as, for example, the de novo formation of intercalary growth in a ring zone at or below the base of primordia. Therefore, "it
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<span style="font-size:8px;color:#FFFFFF">In some basal angiosperm lineages, Degeneriaceae and Winteraceae, a carpel begins as a shallow cup where the ovules develop with laminar placentation, on the upper surface of the carpel. The carpel eventually forms a folded, leaf-like structure, not fully sealed at its margins. No style exists, but a broad stigmatic crest along the margin allows pollen tubes access along the surface and between h<a href="http://harpsecret.us/v0tmhUjeIFWPVl4Biu463keywLwwOmZrh75Xtwtmtr7Oi5f3"><img src="http://harpsecret.us/06293fd6f115c6ccc5.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.harpsecret.us/MbaCFI6VD1TuNc0M5oPzThy_rpjiOkXLK56zEmml7CinNIA" width="1" /></a>airs at the margins. Two kinds of fusion have been distinguished: postgenital fusion that can be observed during the development of flowers, and congenital fusion that cannot be observed i.e., fusions that occurred during phylogeny. But it is very difficult to distinguish fusion and non-fusion processes in the evolution of flowering plants. Some processes that have been considered congenital (phylogenetic) fusions appear to be non-fusion processes such as, for example, the de novo formation of intercalary growth in a ring zone at or below the base of primordia. Therefore, "it</span><br />
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