With the passing of Dr. Ray C. Friesner, Indiana has lost one of her most active field botanists and teachers. For more than thirty years, Dr. Friesner hiked the woods and fields of Indiana, collecting and identifying plants to swell the records of Indiana flora. As a teacher and scientist, he inspired many students with his example of industry, study, and vision
The great number of deeds issued in west-central Indiana within a few years of the completion of the...
The problem was to trace vegetational succession in Wisconsin along a given latitude, and specifical...
The fifteen stands presented in this paper were studied to determine present-day forest composition ...
The moral and intellectual greatness of a University depends primarily upon the qualities of heart a...
If there has ever been a story to inspire a new generation of students to do great things, it is the...
Feature written by Rebecca Dolan on the BUT—The Friesner Herbarium of Butler University in the Vascu...
The earliest scientific work on Indiana vascular flora was done by non-resident travelling naturalis...
The species of the family Characeae have for many years been generally neglected by botanists leavin...
The Friesner Herbarium (BUT) of Butler University is a collection of over 100,000 specimens built fr...
Continuity of observation over an extended period of time is a difficult but vital phase of the stud...
In furtherance of the plan of the Botany Department of Butler University to place on record as rapid...
The photomicrographs were made from herbarium material mounted in water or dilute solutions of deter...
Deam (1) has shown that the flora of Indiana comprises nearly 2,000 species of which approximately 4...
For 35 years, the Botany Department of Butler University published a journal of research conducted b...
This Myxophycean, a member of the Oscillatotiaceae, has not been reported previously for the Western...
The great number of deeds issued in west-central Indiana within a few years of the completion of the...
The problem was to trace vegetational succession in Wisconsin along a given latitude, and specifical...
The fifteen stands presented in this paper were studied to determine present-day forest composition ...
The moral and intellectual greatness of a University depends primarily upon the qualities of heart a...
If there has ever been a story to inspire a new generation of students to do great things, it is the...
Feature written by Rebecca Dolan on the BUT—The Friesner Herbarium of Butler University in the Vascu...
The earliest scientific work on Indiana vascular flora was done by non-resident travelling naturalis...
The species of the family Characeae have for many years been generally neglected by botanists leavin...
The Friesner Herbarium (BUT) of Butler University is a collection of over 100,000 specimens built fr...
Continuity of observation over an extended period of time is a difficult but vital phase of the stud...
In furtherance of the plan of the Botany Department of Butler University to place on record as rapid...
The photomicrographs were made from herbarium material mounted in water or dilute solutions of deter...
Deam (1) has shown that the flora of Indiana comprises nearly 2,000 species of which approximately 4...
For 35 years, the Botany Department of Butler University published a journal of research conducted b...
This Myxophycean, a member of the Oscillatotiaceae, has not been reported previously for the Western...
The great number of deeds issued in west-central Indiana within a few years of the completion of the...
The problem was to trace vegetational succession in Wisconsin along a given latitude, and specifical...
The fifteen stands presented in this paper were studied to determine present-day forest composition ...