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.  

Jumping the Gap with Northern Wireweed

to North Carolina.2   Addendum by Carol Ann McCormick, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Herbarium Curatrix: Botanists are always on the lookout for other plants that may jump

Ruby Deaton Harbison Pharr

Carolina. 9 March 1981. 5. “Leighton Walter Harbison” North Carolina Deaths, 1997-2004. North Carolina State Center for Health Statistics, Raleigh, North Carolina. Ancestry.com. North Carolina, Death Indexes, 1908-2004 [database on-line].

Max Hoyt Hommersand

North Carolina on 16 December 2022. +++++ Anonymous (2006) Hommersand receives lifetime achievement award. University Gazette 31(1): 8. Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA. Max Hommersand, a biology professor who joined

John Nathaniel Couch

1914 he entered Trinity College (now Duke University) in Durham, North Carolina. After three years at Trinity, he transferred to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to study

Mary Eugenia Wharton

animals of the Inner Bluegrass Region of Kentucky: Past, present, & future. The University Press of Kentucky, Lexington.   SOURCES: Dr. Mary Wharton. 2021. Floracliff Nature Sanctuary. https://floracliff.org/dr-mary-wharton/ accessed on

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.  

Following in Botanical Footsteps at Rocky Face Mountain

and T. Howard. 2020. Vascular plants of North Carolina [Internet]. Raleigh (NC): North Carolina Biodiversity Project and North Carolina State Parks. Available from https://auth1.dpr.ncparks.gov/flora/index.php [accessed 29 July 2020] ‘Charles Edward