A headed group of material; the basic structural unit of a paper
Sections are recursive, that is, various levels of sections are indicated by containment, not by different names for the subsections. A <section> element may contain lower level sections that are also tagged using the <section> element, not tagged explicitly as <sec2>, <sec3>, or <subsec1>, etc.
The following, in order:
...
<section><title>Securing a Permanent Colony in the Claimed Lands</title>
<para>With land claimed in the New World, an expedition was
mounted to establish a settlement. ...</para>
...
<section><title>Native Plants and Wildlife</title>
<para>... The settlers discovered that while some roots could
be eaten much in appearance as they were dug, others had to be
boiled before use as a foodstuff. As more fully described below,
other plants included beans, and several crops previously unknown
to the Europeans:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>“macocqwer” (gourds),</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>“melden” (an herb),</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>“planta solis” (sunflower — used in a type of
bread, as well as for broth),</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>peas (powdered in a mortar), and</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>potatoes.</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<section><title>Gourds</title>
<para>The native people grew a variety of large broad-leafed,
ground-covering vines which produced what they called “macocqwer”
or gourds. (<emphasis role="ital">See</emphasis> <xref linkend="gourds"/>.)
Varying in color among shades of green, yellow, and orange, these
gourds served a number of functions, not chief of which was as a
food source. ...</para>
...
</section>
...
</section>
</section>
...
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