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Welcome to the Field Biogeography and Species
Conservation website. During the six-week spring terms of 2006,
2007, 2008, and 2009, Professors John Knox and Jim Warren taught a combined pair of
courses in field biogeography and topics in environmental literature.
The course met three days a week from 8:30 in the morning till 4:30 in
the afternoon. Students received 7 credits for the two courses.
This website records the field experiences we had in the vicinity of
Lexington, Virginia, the field journals, reading journals, and herbaria
that the students compiled, sample "place papers" the students wrote, and the special guests we had as fellow
travelers during the 2006 and 2007 terms.
On the left bar to this page, you will find useful links
to general information about Field Biogeography 2006-2009. The
Class Documents link gives the syllabi for the two linked courses.
The next two links give the webpages for the two instructors. Then
come websites for Robin Kimmerer, who was our special guest professor in
2006, and Barry Lopez, who walked with us in the field and discussed
both his own work and Darwin's Voyage of the Beagle in 2007.
The Smithsonian link takes you to the latest announcement for the 2008
Symposium of the Department of Botany at the Museum of Natural History;
we attended that annual symposium in 2006 and 2008, and from the Botany website you can
access the full program and abstracts of talks delivered in the April
2006 symposium on island biogeography and the April 2008 symposium on
mutualism. Finally, the Associated
Colleges of the South link takes you to the Environmental Initiatives
site. Our 2006, 2007, and 2008 courses, as well as this website itself,
were fundamentally supported by grants from the Faculty and Curriculum
Development Initiative. Our thanks to Barry Allen of Rollins
College and to the other members of the initiative.
The website is a work in progress, but we want to thank
Ben Hartless for serving as our mentor and webmaster.
John Knox
Jim Warren
Lexington, VA |
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