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| Amber Inclusion/ Flower and Bud |
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Field microscopes are essential tools in exploring your environment. Having your very own field microscope is pretty exciting. You can’t wait to use it on anything that you can see!
Exploring the garden or your backyard is the safest and most logical thing to do. There are a lot of specimens in the garden field or in the backyard that you can use with your field microscope.
Why don’t we start with a flower? Did you know that plants classified as angiosperms have the flower as their reproductive organ? And that aside from their aesthetic value, a flower functions as a seed producer by sexual reproduction? In some plants, it is only after fertilization that the flower matures into a fruit that will contain a seed. You can use your field microscopes in studying minute flower structures. You will see that ordinary flower structures will look different (in a positive way) when magnified.
Another sample to use on your field microscope is a flower bud. A flower bud is a shoot that is undeveloped and can be usually seen at the tip of the stem or in the axil of a plant leaf. A flower bud may remain unchanged after it has matured or it may immediately develop into a shoot.
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| FLOWERS |
| Rare Flowers In Dominican Amber |
| $ 59.98 |
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Other Amber Inclusions:
Amber Inside Amber, Ants, Amber Jewelry, Ant Larvae, Ant Pupa, Assassin Bugs, Bees, Beetles, Bristletails, Bugs, Caterpillars, Centipedes, Crickets, Earwigs, Eggs, Feathers, Fighting-Interacting-Carrying, Flies, Flowers & Buds, Gnats, Grasshoppers, Inchworms, Isopods, Jumping Plant Lice, Large Insects, Larvae, Leafhoppers, Leaves, Mammal Hair, Mating Insects, Microcosm (A Little World), Midges, Millipedes, Mites, Mites on Host, Mosquitos, Moths, Other Insects, Other Inclusions (Non-Insect), Other Botanical, Plant Hoppers, Praying Mantis, Pseudoscorpions, Psocids, Pupa and Larvae, Queen Ants, Rare/Unusual/Odd Inclusions, Roaches, Roots of Botanical, Scorpions, Seeds, Snails, Spiders, Spider Webs, Stalactites, Swarms, Termites, Thrips, Ticks, Twigs, Twisted Winged Parasites, Unusual Botanical, Webspinners (Zorapteran), Wasps, Water Bubbles (Enhydros), Weevils |
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