POST‐GLACIAL FOREST SUCCESSION IN NORTHERN NEW JERSEY AS SHOWN BY POLLEN RECORDS FROM FIVE BOGS
- 1 February 1943
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Botany
- Vol. 30 (2), 83-87
- https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1537-2197.1943.tb14734.x
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pollen Records from Lakes in Anoka County, Minnesota: A Study on Methods of SamplingEcology, 1943
- Pollen Spectra from Four Bogs on the Gillen Nature Reserve, Along the Michigan-Wisconsin State LineThe American Midland Naturalist, 1942
- Post-Pleistocene Forest Migration as Indicated by Sediments from Three Deep Inland LakesThe American Midland Naturalist, 1941
- Studies on Connecticut lake sediments; Part 1, A postglacial climatic chronolgy for southern New EnglandAmerican Journal of Science, 1939
- Pollen Spectrum Studies on the Anoka Sand Plain in MinnesotaEcological Monographs, 1939
- Plant Migration in the Southern Limits of Wisconsin Glaciation in IndianaThe American Midland Naturalist, 1939
- Report of Committee on Glaciers, April 1939EOS, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 1939
- The Edge of the Forest in Alaska and the Reasons for Its PositionEcology, 1934
- A Third Expedition to Glacier Bay, AlaskaEcology, 1931