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  1. Solute regulation and growth by roots and shoots of water-stressed maize plants. RE Sharp, WJ Davies. Planta 147, 43-49. , 1979. 669. 1979. Integration of hydraulic and chemical signalling in the control of stomatal conductance and water status of droughted plants. F Tardieu, WJ Davies. Plant, Cell & Environment 16 (4), 341-349.

  2. De Lillian Davies a Lilian Craig. Hasta la noche en que se cruza Bertil en su vida, la existencia de Lilian no había sido gloriosa. Su padre, William John Davies, trabajaba en una fábrica y...

  3. William John Davies. Mother. Gladys Mary Curran. Princess Lilian of Sweden, Duchess of Halland (born Lillian May Davies, later Craig; 30 August 1915 – 10 March 2013), was a British fashion model who became a member of the Swedish royal family through her 1976 marriage to Prince Bertil, Duke of Halland (1912–1997).

    • William John Davies
    • Gladys Mary Curran
  4. William John Davies was born about 1876, in Meredith, Victoria, Australia as the son of William John Davies and Maria Keys. He married Amelia Elizabeth Purcell in 1902, in Merrijig, Victoria, Australia. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 4 daughters. He died in 1958, in Kilmore, Victoria, Australia, at the age of 83.

    • Male
    • Amelia Elizabeth Purcell
  5. Sus padres fueron William John Davies y Gladys Mary Curran, dos ciudadanos galeses, separados en 1920, pero no divorciados formalmente hasta 1939. Ella se crio con su madre y su padrastro. Durante su juventud, Lilian trabajó como modelo en Gales, y posó para revistas de moda, tales como Vogue.

    • Lilian May Davies
  6. William John Davies was admitted on the 22 December 1917 to the 77th Causality Clearing Station, Jaffa, Palestine, Turkey with a gunshot wound to his left thigh and died of wounds the same day. He was only 19 years and 10 months old when he was fatally wounded on One Tree Hill, Palestine.

  7. William John DAVIES was among the more than 330,000 Australians, including 3,000 nurses, who volunteered to serve overseas between 1914 and 1918. An extraordinary number from a population of under five million.