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...it? VI § 246, it produces fruit either superior or inferior? II § 117, 128–133, VI § 53.
The common stem?, neglected by the ancients, and the flower... culm? (especially by the name of stalk) he described well... index?), the tendril of the vine (the hook), and the cluster... he was the first to correctly see as being one and the same VI § 246.
The forms of fruits and seeds, the parts, seats, and embryos? or germs are accurately investigated and universally III §? 22, IV § 99–102, and individually in book VI (cf. index).
Germs or embryos are emitted from different places in the seeds III § 23, IV § 99–102; they are often sterile I §? 186–187, or weak, so that several may grow into one stem VI § 169–171. Some seeds, such as that of wheat, emit two germs III § 23.
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We add the words of Albertus from book XV of On Animals, tract II, chapter 5, emended according to the autograph by the distinguished Ennen: "In plants, however, there is sometimes a diversity between the fruits, and sometimes they are the same according to..."