<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Document xmlns="http://www.tdwg.org/2002/SDD-Experimental" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tdwg.org/2002/SDD-Experimental Australia2002-SDD.xsd">
	<!-- version="0.2"-->
	<Generator application="handcrafted" version="n/a" date="2002-03-12" author="xx" institution="xx"/>
	<!--The 'Generator' information refers only to the last generator that created this document. It does not imply that the data have been authored in the named application. -->
	<ProjectDefinition>
		<Title>Flora of XXX</Title>
		<Editors>X. Someone &amp; Y. Someone-Else</Editors>
		<Copyright>(c) 2002 xxx</Copyright>
	</ProjectDefinition>
	<Items>
		<item identification="Discaria pubescens" abundance="" InternalNotes="" CollectionManager="DiversityCollection" CollectionSpecimenID="M-234823098" CollectionSpecimenFreeDescription="Herbarium M, 234823098" ReferenceManager="" ReferenceID="" ReferenceDescription="" rank="specimen/species/genus/family">
			<!-- item = thing that is being described, taxon, individual, part of individual, disease, etc. -->
			<NaturalLanguageDescription origin="authored" lang="en" ExpertiseLevel="basic">
				<Wording>
Spreading shrub; stems glabrous. Leaves soon deciduous (particularly on older plants, especially when infected with <i>Diseasomyces</i>), oblong, apex obtuse, glabrous or weakly hirsute; stipules dark reddish-brown, extremely rarely yellow, often shallowly joined around the node; spines stout.</Wording>
			</NaturalLanguageDescription>
			<NaturalLanguageDescription origin="authored" lang="en" ExpertiseLevel="basic" contributor="Bob Morris" InFactThisShouldBeFullSetOfDublinCore="">
				<!--item = thing that is being described, taxon, individual, part of individual, disease, etc. -->
				<Wording>Spreading shrub; stems glabrous. Leaves soon deciduous (particularly on older plants, especially when infected with <i>Diseasomyces</i>), oblong, apex obtuse, glabrous or weakly hirsute;</Wording>
				<charactergroup keyref="stipules">
					<Wording>stipules</Wording>
					<Wording>sharply pointed, 3 mm wide,</Wording>
					<character keyref="stipule-color">
						<Wording>darkish brown; </Wording>
						<state keyref="brown">
							<modifier keyref="dark"/>
						</state>
					</character>
				</charactergroup>
				<Wording>extremely rarely yellow, often shallowly joined around the node; spines stout.</Wording>
			</NaturalLanguageDescription>
		</item>
		<item identification="Discaria pubescens">
			<FormalDescription contributor="Bob Morris" InFactThisShouldBeFullSetOfDublinCore="" DateCreated="21.3.2002T18:52" DateUpdated="21.3.2002T12:02">
				<resources>
					<!-- a description may contain resources only!-->
					<resource type="image" uri="sdsdfsdfikjhj.gif"/>
				</resources>
			</FormalDescription>
		</item>
		<item identification="Discaria pubescens" abundance="" InternalNotes="" CollectionManager="" CollectionSpecimenID="" ReferenceManager="DiversityReferences" ReferenceID="A123452342" ReferenceDescription="Flora Australia">
			<NaturalLanguageDescription origin="generated" lang="en" ExpertiseLevel="basic">
				<Wording>
Spreading shrub; stems glabrous. Leaves soon deciduous (particularly on older plants, especially when infected with <i>Diseasomyces</i>), oblong, apex obtuse, glabrous or weakly hirsute; stipules dark reddish-brown, extremely rarely yellow, often shallowly joined around the node; spines stout.</Wording>
			</NaturalLanguageDescription>
			<FormalDescription contributor="Bob Morris" InFactThisShouldBeFullSetOfDublinCore="" DateCreated="21.3.2002T18:52" DateUpdated="21.3.2002T12:02">
				<resources>
					<!-- a description may contain resources only!-->
					<resource type="image" uri="sdsdfsdfikjhj.gif"/>
				</resources>
			</FormalDescription>
			<FormalDescription contributor="Jim Croft">
				<resources>
					<resource type="subkey" uri="sdsdfsdfikjhj"/>
					<resource type="image" uri="sdsdfsdfikjhj.gif"/>
				</resources>
				<character keyref="habit">
					<state keyref="spreading shrub" origin="collation/implicationdefinition/observed/derivedFromImplied // inheritFromAbove // inheritFromBelow"/>
				</character>
				<character keyref="stem, hairiness">
					<state keyref="glabrous"/>
				</character>
				<character keyref="leaves, persistence">
					<state keyref="decidous">
						<modifier keyref="soon"/>
						<ReportedNote lang="en">particularly on older plants, especially when infected with <taxon>Diseasomyces</taxon>"/></ReportedNote>
						<ReportedNote lang="de">insbesondere in älteren Pflanzen oder wenn mit <taxon>Diseasomyces</taxon>"/>infiziert</ReportedNote>
						<!-- note that freetext is not in attribute, but rather as element CData, allowing mixed content. Also, the original brackets are a feature of the formatting processor and not preserved-->
					</state>
				</character>
				<character keyref="leaves, shape">
					<state keyref="oblong"/>
				</character>
				<character keyref="leaves apex, shape">
					<state keyref="obtuse"/>
				</character>
				<character keyref="leaves apex, hairiness">
					<state keyref="glabrous"/>
					<state keyref="hirsute">
						<modifier keyref="weakly"/>
					</state>
				</character>
				<character keyref="stipules, shape">
					<state keyref="oblong"/>
				</character>
				<character keyref="stipules, color" type="nominal">
					<state keyref="brown" autoordered="no">
						<modifier keyref="dark reddish-"/>
					</state>
					<state keyref="yellow" autoordered="no">
						<modifier keyref="extremely rarely"/>
					</state>
				</character>
				<character keyref="stipules, length" type="interval">
					<numeric key="mean"/>
					<parameter/>
				</character>
				<character keyref="stipules, joining">
					<state keyref="joined around the node">
						<InternalNote>recheck after getting Smith '99</InternalNote>
						<!-- note that there is no note for the entire character. Do we need such a note? I would prefer a text-state instead, avoiding ordering issues-->
						<frequency keyref="often"/>
						<modifier keyref="shallowly "/>
					</state>
				</character>
				<character keyref="spines, stoutness">
					<state keyref="stout"/>
				</character>
			</FormalDescription>
			<FormalDescription identification="Discaria pubescens" abundance="" InternalNotes="" CollectionManager="" CollectionSpecimenID="" ReferenceManager="" ReferenceID="" ReferenceDescription="">
				<!--  item can be taxon, disease, specimen, or artificial object 
elements must be rearrangeable
treatment must be translatable
lossless embedded representation of natural language
multiple hierarchies or hierarchy + categories
-->
				<character keyref="leafcolor">
					<state value="brown">
						<frequency value="extremely rarely"/>
						<modifier name="reddish" propagateOnSummarize="No"/>
						<modifier name="dark"/>
					</state>
					<state value="brown"/>
				</character>
			</FormalDescription>
		</item>
	</Items>
	<Terminology>
		<!--- = "character definition" -->
		<CharacterDefinitions>
			<!--- "character list"  -->
			<!--- characters include morphology, sounds, behavior, physiological or molecular tests, disease symptoms  -->
			<CharacterDefinition key="habit">
				<Names>
					<Name lang="en" ExpertiseLevel="basic" value="shape or growth form of entire plant"/>
					<Name lang="de" ExpertiseLevel="basic" value="Erscheinungsbild der Pflanze (Habitus)"/>
				</Names>
				<MeasurementUnit Text=""/>
				<Definitions>
					<Description lang="en" ExpertiseLevel="basic">some description</Description>
				</Definitions>
				<NaturalLanguage>
					<!--NaturalLanguage is an example of a data type required to be free of references to anything else, and which only has a containment relationship to its parent object. These data types can either be processed, or it is recommended that they are stored and passed through when the next output is generated. -->
					<NaturalLanguageWordings>
						<NaturalLanguageWording lang="en" ExpertiseLevel="basic">
							<WordingBeforeStates/>
							<WordingAfterStates/>
							<MeasurementWording/>
						</NaturalLanguageWording>
					</NaturalLanguageWordings>
				</NaturalLanguage>
				<StateDef key="spreading shrub">
					<Resource type="Semantics" idref="243872847"/>
					<Resource type="Image" idref="129838729427"/>
					<Resource type="Image" idref="129838729428"/>
					<!--Resources of type Semantics may occur 0-1, Resources of any other type may occur 0..n times. Problem: Semantics is self-defined, all other types should be MIME types.-->
					<NaturalLanguage>
						<StateWording/>
						<WordingAfterStates/>
						<MeasurementWording/>
					</NaturalLanguage>
				</StateDef>
			</CharacterDefinition>
			<!--StateDef keys are unique only within the CharacterDef, and keyref reference to a state key must also be qualified by the character keyref in which it is contained. In strict schema the selector path must guarantee the uniqueness and existence of reference character and state keys in the terminology element. In the lenient schema this is not required. Adding terminology to character elements is recommended as best practice. If the strict requirement is implemented by xml-keyrefs, then it is equivalent to validity.-->
			<CharacterDef key="leaves, shape">
				<StateDef key="oblong"/>
			</CharacterDef>
			<CharacterDef key="stipules, shape">
				<StateDef key="oblong"/>
			</CharacterDef>
		</CharacterDefinitions>
		<ModifierDefinitions>
			<modifiers name="colorhue">
				<modifier name="reddish">
					<Wording lang="en" Postfix="no" addBlank="yes">reddish</Wording>
					<Wording lang="de" Postfix="no" addBlank="yes">rötlich</Wording>
				</modifier>
			</modifiers>
			<modifiers name="general">
				<modifier name="(by misunderstanding)" stateTrueByMisunderstanding="Yes">
					<Wording lang="en" Postfix="no" addBlank="yes">(by misunderstanding)</Wording>
					<Wording lang="de" Postfix="no" addBlank="yes">(aufgrund von Misinterpretation)</Wording>
				</modifier>
			</modifiers>
		</ModifierDefinitions>
		<FrequencyDefinitions>
			<frequency name="usually" propagateOnSummarize="Yes" LowerRange="0.1" UpperRange="0.3">
				<Wording lang="en" expertiselevel="all">usually</Wording>
				<Wording lang="de" expertiselevel="all">gewöhnlich</Wording>
			</frequency>
			<frequency name="extremely rarely" propagateOnSummarize="No" LowerRange="0" UpperRange="0.01">
				<Wording lang="en">extremely rarely</Wording>
				<Wording lang="de">extrem selten</Wording>
			</frequency>
		</FrequencyDefinitions>
		<CharacterGroupDefinitions>
			<!-- character groups define hierarchies as well as subsets of the character list -->
			<CharacterGroup key="my preferred plant part hierarchy" default="yes">
				<!-- default= use for any purpose, unless something is found for the specific purpose-->
				<Types>
					<Type Name="PartHierarchy"/>
					<Type Name="ObservationMethodHierarchy"/>
					<Type Name="NaturalLanguageReporting"/>
					<Type Name="InteractiveIdentification"/>
				</Types>
				<CharacterGroupItem Name="entire plant">
					<character keyref="habit"/>
					<CharacterGroupItem Name="stem">
						<CharacterGroupItem Name="trunk">
							<character keyref="trunk color"/>
						</CharacterGroupItem>
						<CharacterGroupItem Name="branch">
							<character keyref="branch color"/>
							<character keyref="branch color"/>
						</CharacterGroupItem>
					</CharacterGroupItem>
				</CharacterGroupItem>
				<!-- organism parts hierarchy for the following example
entire plant
   char: "habit"
stem
  trunk
   char: "trunk color"
  branch
   char: "branch color"
leaf
  lamina (= blade)
    char: "leaves, shape"
    margin
      char: "revolution" (states: revolute/involute)
      toothing
        char: "toothing, presence"
    apex
      char: "leaf apex, shape"
    base
      char: "leaf base, shape"
root

phenology, distribution sounds, behavior, are not structures!
-->
			</CharacterGroup>
		</CharacterGroupDefinitions>
	</Terminology>
	<Resources>
		<!-- Proposal to actually include resources totally rather than only URIs.
This probably means that they should be  referenced by RefID elsewhere, which are here resolved either into
included data, or into a uri-->
		<Resource id="129838729427">
			<uri>http://sdfkjsdf fksdf sdlk</uri>
		</Resource>
		<Resource id="129838729428">(encoded data)</Resource>
		<Resource type="Semantics" id="243872847">
			<uri>Dictionary of Trees, 7th edition, fig 2.b</uri>
		</Resource>
	</Resources>
	<!--feature vs. character
character has states

leaf and anther shape terminology
plane shape could be restricted on 0-2 ends (spore, leaf, petiole)

property reusable character state list
leaf color is a character -> what is leaf = structural part  and what is color?
margin of culture at 25°C on MEA after 7 days is yellow

We want:
Ability to link a character to a fixed and potentially shared state list -->
	<ApplicationData>
		<!--Application specific information is placed in Processing Instructions. Recommendation: Each application may read out the appropriate information. Any other target information present should be preserved and output when a new document is generated. This is designed to support itempotent roundtripping data between two applications. This implies that no dependency between the settings and the items and the terminology setting should be relied upon. -->
		<?pi target="LucID" 
something for LucID?>
		<?pi target="DiversityDescriptions" version="2.1"
	<ReportDefinitions>
	<ToHTML name="default">sdij324,234,,4565,,4,6456,,567,,567</ToHTML>
	</ReportDefinitions>?>
	</ApplicationData>
</Document>

