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Title
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Field Notes, 1912, Part 3_096
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Alternative Title
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Field Notes, 1912, Part 3
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Date
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1912
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Creator
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Raymond J. Pool
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Description
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Raymond J. Pool Field Notes
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Identifier
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120712
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Transcription
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96 68 situations however while the former is always found over a sandy substrata and one with usually a lower water content. The plants of C. riparia stand alone together and form a wide expanse of deep green grassy vegetation of about 1 m. in height broken only by an occasional tuft of Typha latifola or Scirpus lacustris relicts of a former association. The only semblance of a second layer is seen in scattered short individuals of the Sagitaria latifolia that are also relicts from the Reed grass Rush Association. Where the association becomes open, as on the outer border, it rapidly pauses into the wet meadow series by the coming in of Eleocharis or Dryopteris . Very frequently this association is extremely rough surfaced became of the tramping of stock and in such places it is characteristic to find the facies restricted to the inumerable low hammocks between which one occasionally seeds another relict in the form of Rumex brittanica , and there may be plant a thin carpet of mosses, and a few spindling individuals of associations of normally drier situations.
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Rights
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To inquire about usage, please contact Archives & Special Collections, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries. These images are for educational use only. Not all images are available for publication.
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Is Version Of
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E:\great nebraska\downloads\downloads\scraped_images\raymond_j_pool_notes_1912_part_3\raymond_j_pool_notes_1912_part_3_120712-1912-096.jpg