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About the Collection
Luther Burbank: His Methods and Discoveries. A 12–volume monographic
series documenting Burbank's methods and discoveries and their practical
application, prepared from his original field notes covering more than
100,000 experiments made during forty years devoted to plant
improvement. Created with the assistance of the Luther Burbank Society
and its entire membership, under the editorial direction of John Whitson
and Robert John and Henry Smith Williams.
Burbank (1849–1926) was one of North America's foremost American plant breeders. He experimented with thousands of plant varieties and developed many new ones, including new varieties of prunes, plums, raspberries, blackberries, apples, peaches, and nectarines. Besides the Burbank potato, he produced new tomato, corn, squash, pea, and asparagus forms; a spineless cactus useful in cattle feeding; and many new flowers, especially lilies and the famous Shasta daisy.
Technical Note
Please note that full-text searching for the electronic-facsimile texts in our collections is based on uncorrected OCR (Optical Character Recognition) results. While such text is often highly accurate, it will contain errors that may affect your search results. In particular, texts with the following characteristics are particularly prone to error (in some cases, accuracy for such texts is so low that we have decided not to attempt to provide full-text searching):
- Hand-written texts;
- Texts that contain diacritics;
- Texts that contain non-Latin scripts;
- Texts that contain obsolete characters (including the "long S" [looks like an "f"]);
- Texts that are printed in a font in which the letters are difficult for the software to differentiate.




