New Lichens in The Old North State

8. Schafale, M. (2012) Guide to the Natural Communities of North Carolina: fourth approximation. North Carolina Natural Heritage Program, North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources, 208 pp.  

Bruce Alexander Sorrie

Camp Mackall, North Carolina. Castanea 62: 239-259.   SOURCES: Gaddy, L.L. (2011) A new species of Hexastylis (Aristolochiaceae) from the Sandhills of North and South Carolina. Phytoneuron 2011-47: 1-5.  

NCBGF Officers and Directors

Board of Directors OFFICERS Carol Tresolini, President Ph.D. Adult and Higher Education, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill M.Ed. Special Education, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill B.A.

William Battle Cobb

William D. (1984) The early history of soil surveys in North Carolina. Raleigh, North Carolina: Soil Science Society of North Carolina. 28 p. 7. Dr. William B. Cobb. Obituary. News

Jumping the Gap with Northern Wireweed

North Carolina. What about plants that are found in North Carolina but not in South Carolina? “Cooley’s meadowrue (Thalictrum cooleyi in the Buttercup Family) is rude in that way —

Henry Roland Totten

the Vascular Flora of the Carolinas. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill. 1183 pp. A page from Henry Roland Totten’s collection notebook.              

Hugo Leander Blomquist

1-21. Blomquist, H. L. (1938) The North Carolina Academy of Science. Science, New Series 88(2272): 59-60. Blomquist, H. L. (1939) Grasses new to North Carolina. Castanea 4 (4/5): 50-55. Blomquist,

Kenneth Bryan Raper

Leading Microbiologists doing Research at Chapel Hill. Press Release 3/4/74 (838): Science News, University News Bureau, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Alumni Records Office, University of North

Mordecai Elisha Hyams

Western North Carolina. By M.E. Hyams, Statesville, N.C., read before the N.C. State Agricultural Society. Prior to the Confederate war, a very small business was carried on in the way