scholarly journals LIST OF PUBLICATIONS ON RESEARCH AT UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING NATIONAL PARK SERVICE RESEARCH CENTER

Author(s):  
University of Wyoming National Park Service Research Center

This section contains a list of publications on Research at the University of Wyoming National Park Service Research Center updated in 1980.

Author(s):  
University of Wyoming National Park Service Research Center

This section is the University of Wyoming-National Park Service Research Center and Jackson Hole Biological Research Station Research Bibliography from 1951-1991.


Author(s):  
University of Wyoming The National Park Service Research Center

This section contains a list of publications at the University of Wyoming and National Park Service Research Center.


Author(s):  
University of Wyoming National Park Service Research Center

This section contains a list of publications on research at the University of Wyoming - National Park Service Research Center.


Author(s):  
University of Wyoming National Park Service Research Center

This section contains a list of publications on research at the University of Wyoming - National Park Service Research Center.


Author(s):  
University of Wyoming The National Park Service Research Center

This section contains a list of publications on research at the University of Wyoming National Park Service Research Center.


Author(s):  
Tim Clark

This report partially summarizes ongoing research between 1 November 1977 and 31 October 1978 that was funded by the University of Wyoming National Park Service Research Center and Grand Teton Natural History Association. The assistance and cooperation of several people is greatly appreciated: T. Hauptman, J. Weaver, T. Campbell, J. Hoak, P. Rathbun, W. Barnore, and D. Casey.


Author(s):  
Richard Adams

Operating under grants from the University of Wyoming-National Park Service Research Station and the Wyoming Historical Society, personnel from the Office of the Wyoming State Archaeologist and volunteers spent eight days performing a cultural resource survey of parts of the Jedediah Smith wilderness in the Caribou-Targhee National Forest. Our survey took place on the west side of the Teton Range in the Badger Creek and Bitch Creek drainages. We surveyed more than 350 acres and recorded four sites in the Caribou-Targhee National Forest: an historic mine and cabin, two new prehistoric sites, and a soapstone source. While all the historic sites would benefit from evaluation by an historian, none of the sites is in need of further work.


Author(s):  
Richard Adams

Operating under a grant from the University of Wyoming-National Park Service Research Station, personnel from the Office of the Wyoming State Archaeologist and volunteers located andre-recorded two soapstone sources in Grand Teton National Park: 48TE1255 B Slim Lawrence's Asbestos Mine B and 48TE529. Over on the west side of the Tetons, in the Caribou-Targhee National Forest, we located and recorded a historic mine, three new prehistoric sites, and a previously unrecorded soapstone source: 48TE1646 - the Rammel Mountain talc mine. Among the six newly discovered sites is 48TE1647, which contains two broken soapstone bowl preforms and a broken vessel associated with other prehistoric artifacts. This is interpreted to be evidence of prehistoric manufacture of soapstone bowls in Wyoming. More work needs to be done at this site as well as other in the Tetons.


Author(s):  
Mark Boyce

We have chosen to feature Lederman's (1991) article entitled "Science: The end of the frontier?" because it addresses several issues of interest to researchers, particularly those who are funded through the University of Wyoming-National Park Service (UW-NPS) Research Center. And we think that it is appropriate to respond by discussing the Research Center's policy related to some of these issues.


Author(s):  
Kent McKnight

The objective is an inventory of the "mushrooms'' to be found in Grand Teton National Park. The study includes all macromycetes of fungi with macroscopic or large, conspicuous fruiting bodies. Most are fleshy or woody Ascomycetes or Basidiomycetes but some are classified in other major taxa. Although there are no published floristic studies of the fungi of this area occasional and sporadic records of collections from the Tetons or Yellowstone are published, including type collections of at least two new species: Cortinarius ashii McKnight & Dublin (1975) and Lactarius gossypinus Hesler & Smith (1979). An interim report listing 131 species was submitted as a contribution to the University of Wyoming-National Park Service Annual Report for 1978 (McKnight, 1978).


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