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Conserving Biodiversity: Lessons from the Smokies." Forum for Applied Reserach and Public Policy 10, no. 2 (1995): 116-120.
"The Southern Appalachian Spruce-Fir Ecosystem: Its Biology and Threats In Research/Resources Managment Report. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, 1984.
Remote Sensing and Landscape Pattern in Great Smoky Mountains National Park Biosphere Reserve, North Carolina and Tennessee." In Coupling of Ecological Studies with Remote Sensing: Potentials at Four Biosphere Reserves in the United States, 52-70. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Man and the Biosphere Program, Department of State, 1986.
"Trichomycete Insect Symbionts in Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Vicinity." Mycologia 98, no. 2 (2006): 333-352.
"Highland Heritage: The Southern Mountains and the Nation. New York: Friendship Press, 1937.
Reports on Rare, Threatened, and Endangered Vascular Plants: Discussion and Guidelines In Research/Resources Management Report. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, 1980.
Wildflowers of the Smokies. 2nd ed. Great Smoky Mountains Association.
Degrees of Elevation: Short Stories of Contemporary Appalachia. Bottom Dog Press, 2010.
Spruce-fir Forests of Eastern North America." In Ecology and Decline of Red Spruce in the Eastern United States, 3-39. Vol. 96. New York, NY: Springer-Verlag, 1992.
"Herbarium Computerization Project." In 2nd Conference on Scientific Research in the National Parks, 101. National Park Service, Southeast Region, 1979.
"Monitoring Vegetation and Rare Plant Populations in US National Parks and Preserves." In The Biological Aspects of Rare Plant Conservation, edited by Hugh Synge, 265-278. New York: John Wiley & Sons Ltd. , 1981.
"The Architecture of Devil's Walking Stick, Aralia Spinosa (Araliaceae)." Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 65 (1984): 404-418.
"Island Biogeogrpahy and Preserve Design: Preserving the Vascular Plants of Great Smoky Mountains National Park." Natural Areas Journal 3, no. 4 (1983): 4-13.
"The Science Plan for the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee. Gatlinburg, TN, 2000.
Smoky Mountain mist babies. Kodak, TN: White-Heart Communications, 1954.
The Flora of Great Smoky Mountains National Park: An Annotated Checklist of the Vascular Plants and a Review of Previous Floristic Work. Uplands Field Research Laboratory, 1982.
Come Next Spring. New York: Clarion Books, 1990.
The Species-Area Relationship of the Southern Appalachian High Peaks: Vascular Plant Richness and Rare Plant Distributions." Castanea 49, no. 2 (1984): 47-61.
"Fire History and Management in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, An Update In Conference on Science in the National Parks. WR 208 ed. Vol. 4. George Wright Society, 1986.
Work Plan: The Ecology of Natural Disturbances in Logged and Unlogged Stands in Cades Cove and Tremont Area of Great Smoky Mountains National Park." In Work Plan: Subprojects of the Vegetation Survey, 1-9. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 1978.
"Frontier." In Writings from The New Yorker: 1927-1976, 217. New York, NY: HarperCollins, 1990.
"New and Noteworthy Plants from Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee." Castanea 47, no. 1 (1982): 78-83.
"A Critique on Overstory/Understory Comparisons Based on Transition Probability Analysis of an Old-Growth Spruce-Fir Stand in the Appalachians." Vegetatio 64, no. 1 (1985): 37-45.
"Convention Chronicle. The University of Tennessee Libraries Digital Collections: From Pi Beta Phi to Arrowmont, 1923.
The Ecology of Natural Disturbances in Logged and Unlogged Stands in the Cades Cove and Tremont Areas of Great Smoky Mountains National Park." In National Park Service Fourth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, Southeast Region, June 16-17, 1978, edited by James D. Wood, 39. Gatlinburg, TN: Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 1978.
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