Stretch of beach with trees on rightEverglades National Park; National Park ServiceView of shoreline and edge of hardwood hammock; water in background; "10-9-51 Tip of Southern peninsula in Sec. 3, Twp. 57, R. 31, Tract 7".
Submergence Curve IISubmergence Curve for South Florida Showing New Data from Florida Bay (81-XXI-26)
1960/1970
Submergence Curve IIISubmergence Curve for South Florida Showing Proposed Downward Adjustment (81-XXI-27)
1960/1970
Sugar cane matures and blooms in the Florida Everglades1 postcard, postally unused; caption: "Sugar cane matures and blooms in the Florida Everglades"; "The Everglades is the only known spot in the continental United States where sugar cane matures and produces seed. Here in its research laboratory the United States Sugar Corporation has developed many of the top varieties of cane."
Tamiami Trail, 1899-1934 (bulk 1920-1928)The Miami News, a daily newspaper, operated from 1898 through 1988.; (Funding) Electronic reproduction. Miami, Fla. : Reclaiming the Everglades, c2000. Mode of access: World Wide Web. System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software. Digitized from photographs at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, Miami, Florida.
The Florida Everglades and the Seminole Indians(Funding) Electronic format produced as part of Reclaiming the Everglades, a collaborative project of the University of Miami, Florida International University, and the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, funded by the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital Library Program.
The Florida Gator1 post card; postally unused; caption: "Free lunch in the Everglades, Florida"; "The Florida Gator. Have you met the Florida Gator? He is the champion negro hater. Although he finds many things to eat. His favorite morsel is negro meat."
The Miami River where it meets the Everglades, ca. 1902-1910.These attractions introduced tourists to the Everglades. One rail car was pulled by an African American (George) and another by a mule a short distance from the Miami River to an observation tower. The tour boats Leo and Sallie brought tourists up the Miami River to the rapids. They then walked a short distance to one of two towers on the edge of the Everglades.; (Funding) Electronic reproduction. Miami, Fla. : Reclaiming the Everglades, c2000. Mode of access: World Wide Web. System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software. Digitized from postcards at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, Miami, Florida.
The Primary Plant BodyDiagrammatic Three-dimensional View of Dicot herbaceous Stem (81-I-15)
1960-1970
The State of Florida Bay Water Quality (1989-2001)(Preferred Citation) Boyer, Joseph N. and Jones, Ronald, "The State of Florida Bay Water Quality (1989-2001)" (2001). SERC Research Reports. Paper 75.
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/sercrp/75
The ecology of northern Florida Bay and adjacent estuaries81 p. maps, diagrs., tables. 23 cm.; "ML62460"; "Literature cited": p. 76-79.; (Ownership) South Florida Collection, Government Documents, Green Library, Florida International University