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  1. Edward Palmer (1831-1911), often regarded as “the father of ethnobotany,” gathered extensive Edward Palmer, ca. 1864, Kansas City natural history collections in North and South America during the late nineteenth century and established standards for plant collecting and reporting, particularly for plants useful to people.

  2. Palmer Edward. Writer: Cruise of the Living Dead. Palmer Edward is the latest member of the Hurricane Film Partners LLC team. His addition brings another level of artistic expertise to Hurricane Film Partners.

  3. View Palmer Edwards profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members.

  4. Palmer's grass, known in the scientific realm as Distichlis palmeri, was named in honor of Edward Palmer as Uniola palmeri Vasey; Palmer was the first botanist to collect the grass. Palmer's grass was a staple food and trade product of the Cocopa, a community who live in the Colorado River Delta floodplain.

  5. Edward Henry Palmer (7 August 1840 – 10 August 1882), known as E. H. Palmer, was an English orientalist and explorer. A church ruin in El 'Aujeh (Auja al-Hafir, ancient Nessana) in the Negev Desert, as illustrated by Palmer (1872) in his The Desert of the Exodus.

  6. Edward Palmer is a Professor (emeritus) of Social Insurance Economics and Senior Fellow at the Uppsala Center for Labor Studies. He shared professorships first at Gothenburg and then Uppsala University with a position as Head of Research and Evaluation at the Swedish Social Insurance Agency.

  7. Throughout his life, Edward Palmer (1829–1911) made botanical, zoological, and archaeological collections in the southwestern United States and Mexico. Palmer collected over 100,000 specimens and discovered approximately 1,000 new species.