Thomas Fanning Wood

De Rosset III, he co-founded in 1878 the North Carolina Medical Journal, a “Monthly Journal of Medicine and Surgery, published in Wilmington, N.C.” He was founder of the North Carolina

Enchantress along the Eno

Carolina and adjacent Tennessee…This is a species of cool and somewhat damp places, Range of Circaea alpina in North Carolina. Courtesy of North Carolina Biodiversity Project. most frequent in spruce-fir

Welcome, new Herbarium students!

of Carolina Covid Student Services Corps (Carolina CSSC). In my free time, I like to read, exercise and enjoy nature.”       Nate Ross is a member of Carolina

Paul Otto Schallert

Carolina: II. Introduction. The Bryologist 41(1): 1-11. Anderson, Lewis E. (1938) The mosses of North Carolina. IV. Archidiaceae to Seligeriaceae (concluded). The Bryologist 41(5): 118-123. Anderson, Lewis E. (1939) The

William Chambers Coker

States and Canada. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Coker, William Chambers & Henry Roland Totten. 1934. Trees of the southeastern states, including Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia,

Steven Worth Leonard

Raleigh: North Carolina Coastal Energy Impact Program, Office of Coastal Management, North Carolina Dept. of Natural Resources and Community Development. Leonard, S. W. 1987. Fimbristylis perpusilla in North Carolina. Castanea

Dennis Harold Latham

in Bath, Beaufort County, North Carolina. John Latham was a farmer.2,4 Dennis Latham graduated in 1931 with a degree in Plant Pathology from North Carolina State College.5 On 23 December,

William Basil Fox

and North Carolina State University (NCSC; ~ 1665 cataloged thus far) are major repositories for Fox’s vascular plant specimens. Despite his short collecting career, Fox’s specimens can be found in

Rassie Everton Wicker

Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill] Wicker, Rassie E. 1953. The home of Flora MacDonald in North Carolina. [archival & manuscript material in the North Carolina Collection,

Preserves and Natural Areas

that is sub-leased by the State of North Carolina Division of Water Resources and managed by the North Carolina Botanical Garden through the North Carolina Botanical Garden Foundation, Inc. The