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The Great Britain Guide

Public art & sculpture · London

Pollen

Free admission

Pollen — a public art in england-london, United Kingdom.

Speed bump, Impington Lane - geograph.org.uk - 5478782

Hugh Venables — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
1 h–2 h
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly

About

Pollen is a public art located in england-london, United Kingdom. Sourced from OpenStreetMap (ODbL licence); see local listings for visitor information, opening hours and admission details.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

Pollen is a powdery substance produced by most types of flowers of seed plants for the purpose of sexual reproduction. It consists of pollen grains (highly reduced microgametophytes), which produce male gametes (sperm cells). Pollen grains have a hard coat made of sporopollenin that protects the gametophytes during the process of their movement from the stamens to the pistil of flowering plants, or from the male cone to the female cone of gymnosperms. If pollen lands on a compatible pistil or female cone, it germinates, producing a pollen tube that transfers the sperm to the ovule containing the female gametophyte. Individual pollen grains are small enough to require magnification to see detail. The study of pollen is called palynology and is highly useful in paleoecology, paleontology, archaeology, and forensics. Pollen in plants is used for transferring haploid male genetic material from the anther of a single flower to the stigma of another in cross-pollination. In a case of self-pollination, this process takes place from the anther of a flower to the stigma of the same flower. Pollen is infrequently used as food and food supplement. It is often contaminated by agricultural pesticides.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

Architecture

Pollen itself is not the male gamete. It is a gametophyte, something that could be considered an entire organism, which then produces the male gamete. Each pollen grain contains vegetative (non-reproductive) cells (only a single cell in most flowering plants but several in other seed plants) and a generative (reproductive) cell. In flowering plants the vegetative tube cell produces the pollen tube, and the generative cell divides to form the two sperm nuclei. Pollen grains come in a wide variety of shapes, sizes, and surface markings characteristic of the species (see electron micrograph, right). Pollen grains of pines, firs, and spruces are winged. The smallest pollen grain, that of the…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
52.2503, 0.1123
County
Cambridgeshire
Parish
Impington
Postcode
CB24 9NH
Parliamentary constituency
St Neots and Mid Cambridgeshire
Official site
www.hisimp.net

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Pollen?
Pollen is in Cambridgeshire, London, United Kingdom (postcode CB24 9NH), in the parish of Impington.
Is Pollen free to visit?
Yes, Pollen is free to enter.
How do I get to Pollen?
Drivers can navigate to postcode CB24 9NH. It sits within the St Neots and Mid Cambridgeshire parliamentary constituency.