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Kings Mountain RDA Vegetative Cover Type Map South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism Scale: 1" = 1000'
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1940-07-01
Vegetation of the Southern Appalachians: An Indexed Bibliography, 1805-1982 Clemson University Libraries Call number: i29.105: ser-63.
Natural Resources Management Plan--Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks; National Park Service
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1986-01
Revised Development Concept Plan: Tyler Bend, Buffalo National River, Arkansas Clemson University Libraries Call number: i29.79/3: b86/2.
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1978-07
Natural Vegetation of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument, Arizona Clemson University Libraries Call number: i29.109: nps/wrua/nrtr-92/45.
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1992-06
Natural Resources Management Plan--Sequoia and Kings Canyon Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks; National Park Service
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1987-01
Environmental overview and analysis of mining effects: Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve, Alaska National Park Service Water Resources Division; National Park Service
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1982-07
Environmental overview and analysis of mining effects: Gates of the Arctic National Park Service Water Resources Division; National Park Service
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1983-06
Riparian vegetation along two forks of the Virgin River in Zion National Park, Utah National Park Service Water Resources Division; National Park Service
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1989-12
Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow Habitat – Vegetation Monitoring: FY 2009 - Final Report The Cape Sable seaside sparrow (CSSS), a federally endangered species, has remained the focus of several water management operations in the Everglades. To monitor vegetation responses to changes in hydrologic regime and fire events within the sparrow habitat, FIU-USGS researchers initiated a vegetation study in 2002 with funding from U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). In the first three years (2003-2005), a detailed account of spatial variation in vegetation composition and structure in relation to hydrology and fire history were documented (Ross et al. 2006). Since 2006, sub-sets of sites in each of six sparrow sub-populations (A-F) have been re-visited annually to address the spatio-temporal changes in vegetation in response to fire events and changes in hydrologic regime. The sub-set sampled each year includes both unburned and burned sites.
2010-01

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