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1850-1859::1855::11 in date 
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From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Gardeners’ Chronicle
Date:
[before 3 Nov 1855]
Source of text:
Gardeners’ Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette , no. 44, 3 November 1855, p. 726
Summary:

CD requests further details about a rain of shells on the Isle of Wight reported by a Gardeners’ Chronicle correspondent.

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project
From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Gardeners’ Chronicle
Date:
13 Nov [1855]
Source of text:
Gardeners’ Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette , no. 46, 17 November 1855, p. 758
Summary:

Reports a case of charlock seeds that retained their vitality for at least eight or nine years. He suggests that their power of retaining vitality when buried in damp soil may be an element in preserving the species and therefore seeds may be specially endowed with this capacity, while the power of retaining vitality in dry, artificial conditions may be an indirect accidental quality of little or no use to the species.

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project
From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Gardeners’ Chronicle
Date:
21 Nov [1855]
Source of text:
Gardeners’ Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette , no. 47, 24 November 1855, p. 773
Summary:

Sends final results of his experiments on the vitality of various kinds of seeds immersed in sea-water. Corrects a false assumption he made in an earlier letter [1684] that plants with ripe seeds would float for some weeks. Now finds that they sink within a month. Since all the seeds he tried sank in sea-water, his experiments are of little or no use "in regard to the distribution of plants by drifting of their seeds across the sea".

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project