It is not a rare event when one is making a detailed study of ornithology to come upon the names of older students of the subject that are apparently unknown to the ornithological public. Their only contribution to the subject may have been a regional or local list published in some obscure periodical or a set of unpublished journals kept over a period of years. It is my purpose to make an attempt to fill in some of these unknowns in our knowledge of historical ornithology. This paper contains three biographies: J. H. Paarmann; Hugo H. Schroder; Burtis H. Wilson
From the Ralph N. Ellis Collection of Ornithology in the University of Kansas Librarie
As late as the early 1990s, the only comprehensive book on Missouri’s birds was Otto Widmann’s Preli...
During a three years\u27 residence at Marshalltown, Marshall County, Iowa, ending September 15, 1915...
It is not a rare event when one is making a detailed study of ornithology to come upon the names of ...
Recently the University of South Carolina press published an outstanding volume on the avifauna of t...
Since Dr. Rudolph M. Anderson wrote The Birds of Iowa in the year 1907 there have been many change...
While the writer was living at Ames during several past years he took various notes on birds observe...
The following few bird notes are based on observations sufficiently rare that it seems they should b...
Clay and O\u27Brien counties lie in a section of Iowa which have received little attention from orni...
An Iowa bird which has received state wide attention during the last few years from both ornithologi...
Perhaps one of the most neglected areas in Iowa ornithology is in the Mississippi Valley region. Tho...
Although the present report is based on notes and observations made, for the most part, in the vicin...
It is the purpose of this paper to connect with a series of papers on winter birds in Northwestern I...
Citation: Phipps, William H. Entomology in country schools. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural...
This publication is part of collection of studies and reports from the University of Iowa, Studies i...
From the Ralph N. Ellis Collection of Ornithology in the University of Kansas Librarie
As late as the early 1990s, the only comprehensive book on Missouri’s birds was Otto Widmann’s Preli...
During a three years\u27 residence at Marshalltown, Marshall County, Iowa, ending September 15, 1915...
It is not a rare event when one is making a detailed study of ornithology to come upon the names of ...
Recently the University of South Carolina press published an outstanding volume on the avifauna of t...
Since Dr. Rudolph M. Anderson wrote The Birds of Iowa in the year 1907 there have been many change...
While the writer was living at Ames during several past years he took various notes on birds observe...
The following few bird notes are based on observations sufficiently rare that it seems they should b...
Clay and O\u27Brien counties lie in a section of Iowa which have received little attention from orni...
An Iowa bird which has received state wide attention during the last few years from both ornithologi...
Perhaps one of the most neglected areas in Iowa ornithology is in the Mississippi Valley region. Tho...
Although the present report is based on notes and observations made, for the most part, in the vicin...
It is the purpose of this paper to connect with a series of papers on winter birds in Northwestern I...
Citation: Phipps, William H. Entomology in country schools. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural...
This publication is part of collection of studies and reports from the University of Iowa, Studies i...
From the Ralph N. Ellis Collection of Ornithology in the University of Kansas Librarie
As late as the early 1990s, the only comprehensive book on Missouri’s birds was Otto Widmann’s Preli...
During a three years\u27 residence at Marshalltown, Marshall County, Iowa, ending September 15, 1915...