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C
Callaway, Ragan Morrison, Edward E. C. Clebsch, and Peter S. White. "A Multivariate Analysis of Forest Communities in the Western Great Smoky Mountains National Park." American Midland Naturalist 118, no. 1 (1987): 107-120.
Canter, Stanley G.. Letter from Stanley G. Canter to the Chief of Resource Management and Science on the Red Spruce Certificate. Gatlinburg, TN: National Park Service, 1988.
Charton, Pete. "The Out-Of-Place Forest: An Ice Age Remnant in the Great Smokies." American Forests 85, no. 5 (1979): 30-33.
Cogbill, Charles V., and Peter S. White. "The Latitude-Elevation Relationship for Spruce-Fir Forest and Treeline along the Appalachian Mountain Chain." Vegetatio 94, no. 2 (1991): 153-175.
Conaway, C. H., and Donald W. Pfitzer. "Sorex Palustris and Sorex Dispar from the Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Journal of Mammalogy 33, no. 1 (1952): 106-108.
Cook, Edward R., and Shephard M. Zedaker. "The Dendroecology of Red Spruce Decline." In Ecology and Decline of Red Spruce in the Eastern United States, 192-231. Vol. 96. New York, NY: Springer-Verlag, 1992.
Cook, Edward R.. A Tree Ring Analysis of Red Spruce in the Southern Appalachian Mountains In Analyses of Great Smoky Mountain Red Spruce Tree Ring Data. New Orleans, LA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, 1988.
Cooley, Everette H.. A Study of Plant Distribution Patterns at a Mid-Altitude Location in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Knoxville, TN: The University of Tennessee, 1954.
Crandall, Dorothy Louise. Ground Vegetation Patterns of the Spruce-Fir Area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee, 1957.
Crandall, Dorothy Louise. "Ground Vegetation Patterns of the Spruce-Fir Area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Virginia Journal of Science 11 (1960): 9-18.
Crandall, Dorothy Louise. "Ground Vegetation Patterns of the Spruce-Fir Area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Ecological Monographs 28, no. 4 (1958): 338-360.
Creed, Irena F., D. L. Morrison, and Niki Stephanie Nicholas. "Is Coarse Woody Debris a Net Sink or Source of Nitrogen in the Red Spruce - Fraser Fir Forest of the Southern Appalachians, USA?" Canadian Journal of Forest Research 34, no. 3 (2004): 716-727.
Culver, David C.. "On Using Horn's Markov Succession Model." The American Naturalist 117, no. 4 (1981): 572-574.
D
Delcourt, Hazel R., and Paul A. Delcourt. Late-Quaternary History of the Spruce-Fir Ecosystem in the Southern Appalachian Mountain Region In The Southern Appalachian Spruce-Fir Ecosystem: Its Biology and Threats. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, 1984.
DeSelm, H. R., and R. R. Boner. Understory Change in Spruce-Fir During the First 16-20 Years Following the Death of Fir In The Southern Appalachian Spruce-Fir Ecosystem: Its Biology and Threats. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, 1984.

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