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PATTERN
Ms. Treat
Ms. Ward
Mme. Jeanne
Cattle Kate
Aleister Crowley
Captain Smith
Christopher
Nellie
Cottontail


COLOR
pineland
heron
teaberry


VIEW
Wide
Close Up
In Situ



ms treat in pineland
18" repeat, 9" drop
Samples available

$180 / roll $48 / sheet

Wallpaper help: How much do I need to order?


ADDITIONAL COLORS
pineland heron teaberry


RESOURCES

- Richard, Frances (2008, Spring). Reversing the Regular Order of Nature: An Interview with Emilie Clark. Cabinet, Issue 29, 46-53.

- Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Lua_Adelia_Davis_Treat






Mary Treat (1830-1923) was an American-born naturalist devoted to the understanding of carnivorous plants. Throughout her many years of autodidactic study, Treat made extensive contributions to the botanical world, published several books and was an outspoken correspondent to Charles Darwin.


Treat and Darwin’s recorded discourse extends over five years, and most notably involves the inner workings of the Utricularia plant's trap. Darwin believed insects wedged their heads into the traps, thus becoming stuck and then consumed. Treat's extensive research, fueled by her curiosity and vigor for experimentation, revealed that the Utricularia plant actually snapped shut when small hairs around the entrance of the trap were triggered. Treat so influenced Darwin's understanding on the subject that he references her several times in his Insectivorous Plants (1875).


Though much of Treat's work has been forgotten, four species of plants and animals bear her name, including the ant species Aphaenogaster treatiae. Look hard enough, and you might spy one of the little critters within her leafy carnivorous menagerie.



All designs copyright © Katie Deedy.