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Article

Human Skeletal Remains from Bradford House III, Site 5JF52, Jefferson County, Colorado

The skeletal remains of an adult male individual from the 5JF52 site was analyzed to the extent allowed by the condition of the bony skeleton. The analysis includes a description of the material, dentition, demographic information pertinent to age, sex, stature and race, and a complete analysis of m

1978Plains AnthropologistDOI: 10.1080/2052546.1978.11908873Cited 2 times
Article

Agriculture 3.0: Preparing for a Drier Future in the Colorado River Basin

Years of drought and climate change are causing water resources to dwindle in the Colorado River Basin. But farmers and scientists are collaborating to learn how to grow crops with less water.

2023EosDOI: 10.1029/2023eo230247Cited 2 times
Article

A tyrannosaurid pedal ungual from the Williams Fork Formation (Campanian) of Colorado and its implications for the biogeography of Laramidian dinosaurs

A right theropod pedal ungual phalanx II-3 from the Campanian Williams Fork Formation of northwestern Colorado is described, and a combination of features, including the large size, tapering distal tip, robust and stout overall form, triangular cross-section, and a relatively flat ventral surface al

2023Acta Geologica PolonicaDOI: 10.24425/agp.2022.140433Cited 2 times
Article

A note on the occurrence of violarite, Copper King Mine, Boulder County, Colorado

Violarite from the Copper King mine, Boulder County, Colo., occurs as a secondary mineral after pentlandite. It is associated with fresh pyrrhotite and with several altered forms of pyrrhotite including secondary pyrite after pyrrhotite. Hence violarite has a much broader stability range in the oxid

1969Economic GeologyDOI: 10.2113/gsecongeo.64.1.91Cited 2 times
Article

Distribution of the Carabidae (Coleoptera) of Boulder County, Colorado

The effect of altitude on the distribution of insects has not been widely studied, and except for isolated observations, no work has been done on the vertical distribution of the ground beetles (Carabidae). It is the purpose of this thesis to show the distribution of the Carabidae throughout the alt

1951American Midland NaturalistDOI: 10.2307/2421999Cited 2 times
Article

Rare species do not disproportionately contribute to phylogenetic diversity in a subalpine plant community

We found that rare species, whether at low abundance or with a small range, do not disproportionately contribute to phylogenetic diversity in our subalpine plant community. These results were consistent across elevations. Instead, rare species might provide phylogenetic redundancy with common specie

2025American Journal of BotanyDOI: 10.1002/ajb2.70061Cited 2 times
Article

Discovery of fossil mammals in the Brown's Park formation of Moffatt County, Colorado

rests directly, but unconformably, upon the Bridger or the Uinta, and all earlier formations in the region northeast and east of the Uinta and Blue Mountains of Utah and Colorado. The formation consists of finer and coarser

1924Annals of the Carnegie MuseumDOI: 10.5962/p.214577Cited 2 times
Article

The Wilson Creek Field, Rio Blanco County, Colorado

Abstract The Wilson Creek field is situated in mountainous terrain of Rio Blanco County, Colo. It was discovered in early 1938 and produces from both the Morrison and Sundance sands of Jurassic age. The underlying Sundance reservoir is fully developed with 18 wells; no dry holes have been drilled. T

1957Journal of Petroleum TechnologyDOI: 10.2118/852-gCited 2 times
Article

Duttonite, New Vanadium Mineral from Peanut Mine, Montrose County, Colorado

1956ScienceDOI: 10.1126/science.123.3205.990.aCited 2 times
Thesis

Abiotic and biotic factors influencing western United States coniferous forests

In the next decade, climate models suggest that global temperatures will continue to rise. In the western United States, increases in temperatures and changes in precipitation patterns will escalate the risk of drought conditions. These potentially warmer, drier conditions could induce physiological

2019Digital Collections of Colorado (Colorado State University)DOI: 10.25675/3.022361Cited 2 times
Article

Lichens of Granitic Rocks in Rocky Mountain National Park Larimer County, Colorado, U.S.A.

A survey of granitic rock surfaces, talus and outcrops, at 25 sites in Rocky Mountain National Park yielded 81 saxicolous lichen species. Fifteen species in 11 genera, or 19% of the total species, were dominant. Observed only once were 31% or 25 species. No new species were reported. Our results sho

2013EvansiaDOI: 10.1639/079.030.0103Cited 2 times
Article

Increased temperature and CO2 induce plasticity and impose novel selection on plant traits

Climate change is simultaneously increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations ([CO2]) and temperatures. We conducted a multi-factorial growth chamber experiment to examine how these climate change factors interact to influence the expression of ecologically relevant morphological and phenolo

2025Integrative and Comparative BiologyDOI: 10.1093/icb/icaf028Cited 2 times
Article

Gray Bull Mammals from the Knight Formation in Moffat County, Colorado

Journal Article Gray Bull Mammals from the Knight Formation in Moffat County, Colorado Get access Malcolm C. McKenna Malcolm C. McKenna Department of Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Journal of Mammalogy, Volume

1954Journal of MammalogyDOI: 10.2307/1375587Cited 2 times
Article

Peltigera on Longs Peak, Colorado, and in Iowa County, Iowa

on uplands. Torreya 14: 167-194. 1914; IV. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 42: 169-217. 1915; V. Plant societies along rivers and streams. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 43: 235-264. 1916; VI. The plant associations of eroding areas along the seacoast. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 47: 80-117. 1920; VII. The plant associat

1939The BryologistDOI: 10.1639/0007-2745(1939)42[142:polpca]2.0.co;2Cited 2 times
Book

Ponderosa pine dwarf mistletoe loss assessment survey on National Forest lands in Colorado

During 1981-82, a roadside/plot survey was conducted on National Forest lands in Colorado to estimate annual merchantable cubic-foot volume loss caused by ponderosa pine dwarf mistletoe in ponderosa pine.This survey indicated that 18 percent of the type was infested.The total annual loss of ponderos

1984DOI: 10.5962/bhl.title.152691Cited 2 times
Article

“River Fogs” of Middle Park, Colorado*

*Work supported by a grant from the Penrose Fund of the American Philosophical Society.

1939Bulletin of the American Meteorological SocietyDOI: 10.1175/1520-0477-20.9.415Cited 2 times
Article

The geology, petrography, and mineralogy of the vicinity of Italian Mountain, Gunnison County, Colorado

1927Proceedings of the United States National MuseumDOI: 10.5479/si.00963801.71-2690.1Cited 2 times
Article

On the similarity of hillslope hydrologic function: a clustering approach based on groundwater changes

Abstract. Hillslope similarity is an active topic in hydrology because of its importance in improving our understanding of hydrologic processes and enabling comparisons and paired studies. In this study, we propose a holistic bottom-up hillslope clustering based on a region's integrative hydrodynami

2022Hydrology and Earth System SciencesDOI: 10.5194/hess-26-3805-2022Cited 2 times
Article

Dispersal of the golden-mantled ground squirrel (Callospermophilus lateralis)

Dispersal is common in mammals and can have an important role in shaping demography, genetics, distribution, and social structure. Dispersal entails potential costs but also potential benefits, and the dispersal decision is thought to be conditional; the potential disperser assesses prospects for su

2025Journal of MammalogyDOI: 10.1093/jmammal/gyae106Cited 2 times
Article

Range-wide study in a sexually polymorphic wild strawberry reveals climatic and soil associations of sex ratio, sexual dimorphism and sex chromosomes

2025Journal of EcologyDOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.70056Cited 2 times