Examples of Botanic Garden in a sentence
Overall Funding LevelsOperations of the Architect are funded in the following 10 accounts: general administration, Capitol building, Capitol grounds, Senate office buildings, House office buildings, Capitol power plant, Library buildings and grounds, Capitol Police buildings and grounds, Capitol Visitor Center, and Botanic Garden.
ReferenceBay-Friendly Landscape Guidelines, Practice 4.3; Bay-Friendly Lawn Alternatives plant list at www.BayFriendly.org; Brooklyn Botanic Garden Publications, Easy Lawns, Low Maintenance Native Grasses for Gardeners Everywhere.• Submit calculations of square feet of turf, excluding sports and multiple use fields, and square feet of total irrigated area.• Submit planting plans with sports and multiple use fields identified.
Support Agency Funding U.S. Capitol PoliceThe U.S. Capitol Police (USCP) are responsible for the security of the Capitol Complex including the U.S. Capitol, the House and Senate office buildings, the U.S. Botanic Garden, and the Library of Congress buildings and adjacent grounds.
Removal of the stomach and intestines, but no other dressing, may take place on the spot, under the supervision of the veterinarian.
In order to maintain a secure source for seed and provide some assurance of maintaining the genome of Umtanum desert buckwheat over time, Berry Botanic Garden in Portland, Oregon, has collected and stored several seed accessions for the species.
The National Botanic Garden of Wales The first botanic garden of the new millennium, the National Botanic Garden of Wales stretches over more than 568 acres within rural Carmarthenshire.
Except as provided in para- graph (r)(11), the Library of Con- gress, including management there- of; the House Library; statuary and pictures; acceptance or purchase of works of art for the Capitol; the Botanic Garden; and purchase of books and manuscripts.
Part of the grounds form the University of Dublin Botanic Garden.
It consists of the Botanic Garden and Waun Las National Nature Reserve, which is managed as an organic farm.
Mark Harrison, “The Calcutta Botanic Garden and the Wider World, 1817–46,” in Science and Modern India: An Institutional History, c.1784–1947, ed.