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slash pine migrating north wabd. Jour. Forestry 27 : 749-750. 1929. 



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WATER REQUIREMENTS AND GROWTH OF YOUNG CYPRESS. SOC. Amer. Foresters 



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DESTRUCTION OF THE FOREST MEANS DESTRUCTION OF THE FAUNA AND FLORA. 



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RECLAMATION OF GRASS LANDS BY UTAH JUNIPER ON THE TUSAYAN NATIONAL 



forest, ariz. Jour. Forestry 19: 647-651. 1921. 



Moore. Barrington. (2925) 



notes on succession from pine to oak. Bot. Gaz. 61 I 59-66. 1916. 



Munger. T. T. (2926) 



ECOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE TRANSITION FROM OLD FORESTS TO NEW. Science 



72: 327-332, 1930. 



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REPLACEMENT OF YELLOW PINE BY LODGEPOLE PINE ON THE PUMICE SOILS OF 



central Oregon. Soc. Amer. Foresters Proc. 9: 396-406. 1914. 



Munns, E. N. (2928) 



the biotio factor in forestry. Sci. Monthly 18 (3) : 322-330, illus. 1924. 



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high temperatures and eucalypts. Jour. Forestry 19: 25-33. 1921. 



Murdoch, John, Jr. - (2930) 



the replacement of moth-infested oak stands in new england. soc. 

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Pammel. L. H. (2931) 



A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE VEGETATION OF SWAMP. CLAY, AND SANDSTONE 

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central, and southeastern Iowa. Davenport Acad. Sci. Proc (1904-6) 

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Pearson, G. A. (2932) 



LIGHT AND MOISTURE IN FORESTRY. Ecology 11: 145-160, illllS. 1930. 



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MEASUREMENT OF PHYSICAL FACTORS IN SYLVICULTURE. Ecology 9 '. 404-411. 



1928. 



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THE RELATION BETWEEN SPRING PRECIPITATION AND HEIGHT GROWTH OF WESTERN 



yellow-pine saplings in Arizona. Jour. Forestry 16 : 677-689. 1918. 



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TEMPERATURE SUMMATIONS WITH REFERENCE TO PLANT LIFE. U. S. Monthly 



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Peters, Richard. (2936) 



departure of the southern pine timber, a proof of the tendency in nature 

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on succession of timber. Phila. Soc Prom. Agr. Mem. 3 : 411-412. 1814. 



Rigg, G. B. (293S) 



birch succession in sphagnum bogs. Jour. Forestry 20: 848-850. 1922. 



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forest succession and rate of growth in sphagnum bogs. Jour. Forestry 

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some factors in evergreenness in the puget sound region. Ecology 2 : 

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