In the July, 1946, issue of FIELD & LABORATORY, Dr. Rogers McVaugh has published an account of the travels and plant-collecting activities of G. C. Nealley, little-known botanist of Texas. While McVaugh\u27s paper was in its final revision, and passing through the press, I endeavored to bring into shape for publication a biographical footnote of him from my accumulated notes of several years. The task offered difficulties; many gaps of information could not be filled without wide correspondence; the result was that the note had to be deferred to the present
Benjamin Carroll Tharp was a legendary Texas botanist who made fundamental contributions to understa...
The way thro’ oak, Taeda and long leaf, many swamps and lagoons with taxodium; hunters of duck on tr...
It is the purpose of this bulletin to give an a.ccount of investigations of a botanic nature pertai...
In the July, 1946, issue of FIELD & LABORATORY, Dr. Rogers McVaugh has published an account of the t...
One of the more prolific botanical collectors in Texas in the late 19th century was G. C. Nealley, w...
While the senior author was in training at Camp Barkeley, Taylor County, Texas, from September 1942 ...
Ferdinand Rugel was one of the most interesting, but least known, of the botanists who worked in the...
I have before me the Report of the Botanist to the Regents of the University of the State of New ...
For about three months in 1945, and for a similar period in 1947, I was able to carry on field-work ...
The pages of the classic Flora of North America, (1838- 1843), by John Torrey and Asa Gray, contain ...
A herbarium is the means by which the plant life of a large area is sampled and made conveniently ac...
Winkler, in his useful account of botanical investigations in Texas, states (p. 5) that Jean Louis B...
During twenty-five years\u27 travel and plant-collecting in Texas, I have made a number of first col...
In the last issue of Field & Laboratory (26, 86-139) appeared the first 331 sketches (Abadie to Gilb...
The completion of the sixth volume of this Flora gives me the privilege to dedicate this to the memo...
Benjamin Carroll Tharp was a legendary Texas botanist who made fundamental contributions to understa...
The way thro’ oak, Taeda and long leaf, many swamps and lagoons with taxodium; hunters of duck on tr...
It is the purpose of this bulletin to give an a.ccount of investigations of a botanic nature pertai...
In the July, 1946, issue of FIELD & LABORATORY, Dr. Rogers McVaugh has published an account of the t...
One of the more prolific botanical collectors in Texas in the late 19th century was G. C. Nealley, w...
While the senior author was in training at Camp Barkeley, Taylor County, Texas, from September 1942 ...
Ferdinand Rugel was one of the most interesting, but least known, of the botanists who worked in the...
I have before me the Report of the Botanist to the Regents of the University of the State of New ...
For about three months in 1945, and for a similar period in 1947, I was able to carry on field-work ...
The pages of the classic Flora of North America, (1838- 1843), by John Torrey and Asa Gray, contain ...
A herbarium is the means by which the plant life of a large area is sampled and made conveniently ac...
Winkler, in his useful account of botanical investigations in Texas, states (p. 5) that Jean Louis B...
During twenty-five years\u27 travel and plant-collecting in Texas, I have made a number of first col...
In the last issue of Field & Laboratory (26, 86-139) appeared the first 331 sketches (Abadie to Gilb...
The completion of the sixth volume of this Flora gives me the privilege to dedicate this to the memo...
Benjamin Carroll Tharp was a legendary Texas botanist who made fundamental contributions to understa...
The way thro’ oak, Taeda and long leaf, many swamps and lagoons with taxodium; hunters of duck on tr...
It is the purpose of this bulletin to give an a.ccount of investigations of a botanic nature pertai...