Browse
Export 18 results:
Filters: Keyword is Oaks [Clear All Filters]
Dendroecological Analysis of Successional Dynamics for a Presettlement-origin White-pine Mixed-oak Forest in the Southern Appalachians." Journal of Ecology 84 (1996): 328-.
"The Importance of Increment Core Samples and Disturbance History in the Evaluation of Old-Growth Forests in Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Natural Areas Journal 14, no. 2 (1994): 140-142.
"The Importance of Increment Core Samples and Disturbance History in the Evaluation of Old-growth Forests in Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Natural Areas Journal 14, no. 2 (1994): 140-142.
"The Development of Association and Climax Concepts: Their Use in Interpretation of the Deciduous Forest." American Journal of Botany 43, no. 10 (1956): 906-911.
"The Effects of Prescribed Burning by the National Park Service on Pine-Oak Forests Within Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Urbana-Champaign, IL: University of Illinois, 2006.
A Dendrochronological Analysis of a Disturbance-Succession Model for Oak-Pine Forests of the Appalachian Mountains, USA." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 40, no. 7 (2010): 1373-1385.
"Stand Dynamics of Old-Growth Forests in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee, USA." In Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. Boston, MA, 2008.
"Age Structure and Radial Growth in Xeric Pine-Oak Forests in Western Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 126, no. 2 (1999): 139-146.
"The Response of Understory Species Composition, Diversity, and Seedling Regeneration to Repeated Burning in Southern Appalachian Oak-Hickory Forests." Natural Areas Journal 29, no. 3 (2009): 255-262.
"Stand Restoration Burning in Oak–pine Forests in the Southern Appalachians: Effects on Aboveground Biomass and Carbon and Nitrogen Cycling." Forest Ecology and Management 190, no. 2-3 (2004): 311-231.
"Frontispiece. Tree-Ring Research journal, 2011.
Environmental Control of Stomatal Conductance in Forest Trees of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Environmental Pollution 110, no. 2 (2000): 225-233.
"Large oak on state line near Laurel Top.. The University of Tennessee Libraries Digital Collections: Albert Gordon "Dutch" Roth Digital Photograph Collection, 1934.
Oak tree on state line between Low Gap and White Rock.. The University of Tennessee Libraries Digital Collections: Albert Gordon "Dutch" Roth Digital Photograph Collection, 1934.
Appalachian Oak Forest." In Biodiversity of the Southeastern United States: Upland Terrestrial Communities, edited by William Haywood Martin, Stephen G. Boyce and Arthur C. Echternacht, 255-303. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1993.
"Climatic Response of Oak Species across an Environmental Gradient in the Southern Appalachian Mountains, USA." Tree-Ring Research 67, no. 1 (2011): 27-37.
"Old Growth Project: Stand Delineation and Disturbance Rating Great Smoky Mountains National Park In Technical Report NPS/ SERGRSM/ NRTR. Gatlinburg, TN: National Park Service, 1994.