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'Himalayan Musk Rose' References
Article (magazine)  (Nov 2015)  Page(s) 1621.  
 
....three samples of R. odorata (R. sect. Chinenses, sample no. 31–33) formed an inner clade with R. brunonii (sample no. 20), R. helenae (sample no. 21), and R. weisiensis (sample no. 27) of R. sect. Synstylae, is similar to two recent studies (Fougere-Danezan et al., 2015; Zhu et al., 2015).
Booklet  (2009)  Page(s) 28.  
 
Diploid...R. brunonii, heterozygous loci 55% [Provenance: China]
Article (magazine)  (2009)  Page(s) 30.  
 
R. brunonii Lindl.  Source RJBM [Collection of Texas A. M. University] Chromosome Number 28 [?]
Website/Catalog  (2009)  
 
Rosa moschata Hook. f. non-Mill. nec Herrm. Synonym : R. brunonii Lindl.

Habitat : Central and Western Himalayas, ascending to 3,000 m.
English : Himalayan Musk Rose. (Flowers—white, fruit—orange red or dark brown.)
Ayurvedic : Kubjaka (non-classical).
Folk : Kujai, Kuujaa.

Action : Plant—used in bilious affections, irritation of the skin and eye diseases. Rose water and otto is extracted from the flowers in Himachal Pradesh.
Article (misc)  (Jun 2007)  
 
R. brunonii is the typical musk rose of the Himalayas, forming enormous climbing bushes at fairly low altitudes – around 1200-2400 meters, with hooked prickles and terminal clusters of many fragrant white to cream flowers. These are borne in tremendous bunches with that enchanting capacity of the musk rose, noted by the great rosarian, Graham Thomas, of wafting its fragrance in the air.
The foliage is also very handsome in some forms, especially the well know Brunonii ‘La Mortola’ where the leaves are a striking grey green.
We saw many bushes of R .brunonii on our 1982 trip, on the same footpath to the Valley of Flowers, at 1800 meters.
Book  (2000)  Page(s) 49.  Includes photo(s).
 
Rosa brunonii/’The Himalayan Musk’ = Botanique… rameaux brun verdâtre bardés d’aiguillons crochus… folioles oblongues, retombantes, sont vert grisâtre… grands corymbes de petites fleurs blanc pur suivies de fruits ovoïdes passant rapidement du rouge au brun à maturité. De rusticité moyenne, il a été distribué par erreur, durant des années, sous le nom de Rosa moschata… Rosa moschata nepalensis, espèce distincte, est souvent citée par erreur comme synonyme de Rosa brunonii. Himalaya vers 1823.
Article (magazine)  (1998)  Page(s) 9.  
 
The essential oil of the flowers of Rosa brunonii (Rosaceae) was prepared by hydrodistillation and studied by capillary GC-FID and GC-MS; 35 constituents were identified, accounting for 78.4% of the total oil. The essential oil consisted mainly of eugenol (30%), citronellol (2.65%), geraniol (10.5%) and terpinen-4-ol (13.7%) as the major compounds.
Book  (Oct 1996)  Page(s) 37.  
 
R. brunonii ('Himalayan Musk Climber') c. 1822. Description... Clusters of small white single blooms in summer are deliciously Musk-rose scented... tiny orange hips...
Book  (Sep 1993)  Page(s) 20.  
 
R. brunonii; 'Himalayan Musk Rose' Often confused with the true 'Musk Rose' (R. moschata) … brought to Europe from its native Himalayas in 1822. By the turn of the century it was widely accepted as the 'Musk Rose'. Once-blooming. Fragrant.
Book  (Feb 1993)  Page(s) 30.  Includes photo(s).
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