2,568 results — type: Journal Article ·
Watering the Land: The Colorado River Project
Research Article| October 01 1993 Watering the Land: The Colorado River Project Kevin Starr Kevin Starr Search for other works by this author on: This Site PubMed Google Scholar Southern California Quarterly (1993) 75 (3-4): 303–332. https://doi.org/10.2307/41171683 Views Icon Views Article contents
The heritability of fear: decomposing sources of variation in marmot flight initiation distance
Piracy of nesting materials from and by the broadtailed hummingbird
In the course of nesting microclimatic studies of the Broad-tailed Hummingbird (Selusphorus platycercus), I observed three cases of intra-or interspecific piracy of nesting materials. These observations were made in the vicinity of the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, Gothic, Gunnison County, C
Biden Administration Considers Unprecedented Solution to Colorado River Crisis
As Colorado River Basin states prove unable to reach a consensus in reducing their water consumption, the U.S. Department of the Interior is investigating an option that defies the Law of the River.
Paleoecology of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Utah: Human impacts on landscape and implications for resource management on the southern Colorado Plateau
A new Late Cretaceous metatherian from the Williams Fork Formation, Colorado
Heleocola piceanus, a new, relatively large metatherian from Upper Cretaceous (‘Edmontonian’) strata of the Williams Fork Formation in northwestern Colorado is described, based on a recently discovered jaw fragment (MWC 9744), in addition to three isolated teeth initially referred by other studies t
Five years in: a status review of conservation actions from the rare plant addendum to the 2015 Colorado state wildlife action plan (SWAP)
17th annual symposium held virtually from several locations and Colorado on September 18, 2020.
Folsom Point Diggings: The Johnson Site in the Foothills of Larimer County, Colorado
The Johnson site is a Folsom occupation in Larimer County, Colorado. T. Russell Johnson discovered the site in 1935, which led to excavations by the Colorado Museum of Natural History in 1936 and later work in 1960 by the University of Wyoming. Little is known of the site due to limited reporting of