WAYNE'S WORD Legend
|
Home page for the Wayne's Word web site: An on-line textbook of natural history; it includes links to Wayne's Word quarterly, monthly & trivia articles, copyright policy, on-line classes taught by Professor Armstrong, valuable hyperlinks to biology sites on the WWW, search engines, and publication update information.
|
|
An alphabetical index to all the topics in Wayne's Word articles, plus an alphabetical index to economically important plant families; you may also look up articles under year, botany or biology; there is also a complete list of Professor Armstrong's printed publications in books, magazines and journals.
|
|
Quarterly and monthly articles about unusual and noteworthy plants (including algae and fungi) brought to Professor Armstrong by his biology and botany students; the articles are listed in reverse chronological order.
|
|
More high-memory-load, fact-filled articles about various biological and botanical subjects; articles listed in reverse chronological order.
|
|
On-line, dichotomous key to the duckweed family in North America, with color images of all the species; major taxonomic and biological features of the family are also discussed.
|
|
On-line articles and course materials related to general biology courses taught by Professor Armstrong; including General Biology Lecture/Lab (Biology 100) and General Biology Lecture Only (Biology 101).
|
|
On-line articles and course materials related to general botany courses taught by Professor Armstrong; including Plants and People (Botany 115) and Identification of Spring Wildflowers (Botany 110).
|
|
On-line search tool that find's any Wayne's Word subject, phrase, image or word on the Palomar College server; this is preferably used with high bandwidth connections, such as cable or DSL networks.
|
Use the colored Buttons at the top of every page to click on Wayne's Word, Index, Noteworthy Plants, Trivia, Lemnaceae, Biology 101, Botany, and Search.
Note: This site may be viewed with most popular browsers, using default font settings. For best display and word wrap, use the maximum window size and display settings of 800 X 600, 1024 x 768 or 1280 x 800 pixels and High Color (16, 24 or 32 bit). On larger monitors the pages will have more empty space on the right and left. Most pages created with Arachnophilia. |
|