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Tewksbury, C. E., and Helga Van Miegroet. "Soil Organic Carbon Dynamics along a Climatic Gradient in a Southern Appalachian Spruce-fir Forest." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 37, no. 7 (2007): 1161-1172.
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.
Smith, George Francis. Southern Appalachian Fir and Fir-Spruce Forest Community Changes Following Balsam Woolly Adelgid Infestation In Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. Vol. Master of Science. Knoxville: University of Tennessee, 1997.
Groton, Elizabeth, and Christopher C. Eagar. Southern Appalachian Red Spruce--Fraser Fir Forests In Analyses of Great Smoky Mountain Red Spruce Tree Ring Data. New Orleans, LA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,, 1988.
White, Peter S.. The Southern Appalachian Spruce-Fir Ecosystem: Its Biology and Threats In Research/Resources Managment Report. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, 1984.
Scarborough, Angela R., Harold W. Keller, and Joseph S. Ely. "Species Assemblages of Tree Canopy Myxomycetes Related to Bark pH." Castanea 74, no. 2 (2009): 93-104.
Allen, Thomas R., and John A. Kupfer. "Spectral Response and Spatial Pattern of Fraser fir Mortality and Regeneration, Great Smoky Mountains, USA." Plant Ecology 156, no. 1 (2001): 59-74.
Thompson Brothers Commercial Photographers. Spruce growing out of black birch. The University of Tennessee Libraries Digital Collections: Thompson Brothers Digital Photograph Collection, 1920.
White, Peter S., and Charles V. Cogbill. "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.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The Spruce-Fir Nature Trail. Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association, 1963.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Spruce-Fir: Self-Guiding Nature Trail. Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association, 1965.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Spruce-Fir: Self-Guiding Nature Trail. Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association, 1965.
Zedaker, Shephard M., Niki Stephanie Nicholas, Christopher C. Eagar, Peter S. White, and Thomas E. Burk. Stand Characteristics Associated with Potential Decline of Spruce-Fir Forests in the Southern Appalachians In Proceedings of the US/FRG Research Symposium: Effects of Atmospheric Pollutants on the Spruce-Fir Forests of the Eastern United States and the Federal Republic of Germany. Burlington, VT: U.S.D.A. Forest Service, 1988.
Smith, David K.. A Status Report on Bryophytes of the Southern Appalachian Spruce-Fir Forests In The Southern Appalachian Spurce-fir Ecosystem: Its Biology and Threats. Gatlinburg, Tennessee: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, 1984.
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.
Bruck, R. I.. "Survey of Diseases and Insects of Fraser Fir and Red Spruce in the Southern Appalachian Mountains." European Journal of Forest Pathology 19, no. 7 (1989): 389-398.
Adams, Harold S., and Samuel B. McLaughlin. "A Survey of Growth-Trend Decline in Spruce in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park as Influenced by Topography, Age, and Stand Development." In Eleventh Annual Scientific Research Meeting, edited by James D. Wood, 38-40. Gatlinburg, Tennessee: U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service, 1985.
Adams, Harold S., Samuel B. McLaughlin, T. J. Blasing, and D. N. Duvick. A Survey of Radial Growth Trends in Spruce in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park as Influenced by Topography, Age, and Stand Development. Oak Ridge National Laboratory: U.S. Department of Energy, 1990.
Reams, Gregory A., and Paul C. Van Deusen. "Synchronic Large-scale Disturbances and Red Spruce Growth Decline." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 23 (1993): 1361-1374.
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Cain, Stanley A.. Tertiary Elements of the Cove Hardwoods Forest of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park In Symposium on Biology of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee, Department of Botany, 1938.
Van Miegroet, Helga, Irena F. Creed, Niki Stephanie Nicholas, D. G. Tarboton, K. L. Webster, J. Shubzda, B. Robinson, James L. Smoot, Dale W. Johnson, Steven E. Lindberg et al. "Is There Synchronicity in Nitrogen Input and Output Fluxes at the Noland Divide Watershed, a Small N-Saturated Forested Catchment in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park." The Scientific World Journal 1 (2001): 480-492.
Stupka, Arthur. "Through the Year in the Great Smoky Mounatins National Park, Month by Month." In The Great Smokies and the Blue Ridge: The Story of the Southern Appalachians, edited by Roderick Peattie, 263-289. New York: The Vanguard Press, 1943.
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.
McLaughlin, Samuel B., T. J. Blasing, and D. J. Downing. "Two Hundred Year Variation of Southern Red Spruce Radial Growth as Estimated by Spectral Analysis: Comment." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 24, no. 11 (1994): 2299-2304.
Reams, Gregory A., Niki Stephanie Nicholas, and Shephard M. Zedaker. "Two Hundred Year Variation of Southern Red Spruce Radial Growth as Estimated by Spectral Analysis." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 23 (1993): 291-301.

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