INHS Collections Data

Dataset: All Collections
Taxa: Ageratina altissima var. roanensis
Search Criteria: excluding cultivated/captive occurrences

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Page 1, records 1-12 of 12

Illinois Natural History Survey - Plant Collection


ILLS:PLANT
Ageratina altissima var. roanensis (Linnaeus) King & H.E. Robinson
H.S. Pepoon   5471931-00-00
United States, Tennessee, Sevier, Roaring Fork, Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

ILLS:PLANT
Loy R. Phillippe, Dan Busemeyer, & Mary A. Feist   327252000-09-29
United States, Tennessee, Cocke, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Cosby Watershed. Hartford 7.5 minute quadrangle. Lower Mount Cammerer Trail between Cosby Creek and Toms Creek. Elevation about 2475 feet.

ILLS:PLANT
Dan Busemeyer, Loy R. Phillippe, & Mary Ann Feist   3382000-09-27
United States, North Carolina, Haywood, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Big Creek Watershed. Luftee Knob 7.5 minute quadrangle. Big Creek horse trail area. Steep rocky north facing slope. Elevation about 2850 feet.

ILLS:PLANT
D.T. Busemeyer, M.A. Feist, P.B. Marcum, & L.R. Phillippe   7202001-09-17
United States, Tennessee, Blount, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Panther Creek Watershed. Calderwood 7.5 minute quadrangle. Hannah Mountain Trail. Elevation about 3450 feet.

ILLS:PLANT
P. B. Marcum, C.J. Carroll, G. Spyreas, S. Gallo, and G. Cunningham   PBM 16602002-10-06
United States, Tennessee, Blount, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Shop Creek Watershed (access off of U.S. 129). Calderwood, TN Quad. Elevation ~ 905 feet.

ILLS:PLANT
Connie Carroll, Rick Phillippe, Sue Gallo, Dan Busemeyer, Paul Marcum, James Ellis, Rick Larimore   1272002-10-08
United States, Tennessee, Blount, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. White oaks sinks watershed. Wear Cove Quadrangle.

ILLS:PLANT
Ageratina altissima var. roanensis (Linnaeus) King & H.E. Robinson
Loy R. Phillippe, Jim Payne, and Paul B. Marcum   370842004-07-30
United States, Tennessee, Sevier, Along the Appalachian Trail at Double Spring Gap Shelter. (WGS84/NAD83)., 35.5653 -83.5427, 1676m

ILLS:PLANT
Ageratina altissima var. roanensis (Linnaeus) King & H.E. Robinson
Paul B. Marcum, Loy R. Phillippe, Dan Busemeyer, Connie Carroll-Cunningham, and Grant Cunningham.   29342004-10-06
United States, North Carolina, Swain, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Along Forney Ridge Trail., 35.556 -83.4978, 1847m

ILLS:PLANT
Loy R. Phillippe, Valerie Sivicek, and Jim Payne   413932008-10-06
United States, Tennessee, Sevier, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. East side United States Highway 441 (Tennessee State Highway 71) on south-facing slope of Anakeesta Ridge. Coordinate datum: WGS84/NAD83., 35.62563 -83.41803, 1411m

ILLS:PLANT
Connie Carroll-Cunningham, Grant Cunningham & Loy R. Phillippe   6452007-10-18
United States, Tennessee, Sevier, The Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Along Little River Trail north of its junction with Cucumber Gap Trail and south of Big Hollow Branch and Phoebe Branch. Coordinate Datum: WGS84/NAD83., 35.64209 -83.55387, 747m

ILLS:PLANT
Ageratina altissima var. roanensis Linnaeus) R.M. King & H. Robinson
Loy R. Phillippe & James R. Payne   421962009-10-05
United States, Tennessee, Blount, The Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Along Whiteoak Flats Branch above its confluence with the Little River and east of the Townsend Y, south side of the Little River. Coordinate Datum: WGS84/NAD83., 35.65935 -83.69325, 475m

ILLS:PLANT
Ageratina altissima var. roanensis R.M. King & H.E. Robinson
M.A. & M.F. Basinger   s.n.2014-08-05
United States, West Virginia, Pendleton, Along unnumbered road off of FR 112 down from Spruce Knob, southwest of FR 104 (this road goes to private land), Monongahela National Forest.


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Google Map

Google Maps is a web mapping service provided by Google that features a map that users can pan (by dragging the mouse) and zoom (by using the mouse wheel). Collection points are displayed as colored markers that when clicked on, displays the full information for that collection. When multiple species are queried (separated by semi-colons), different colored markers denote each individual species.

Google Earth (KML)

This creates an KML file that can be opened in the Google Earth mapping application. Note that you must have Google Earth installed on your computer to make use of this option.
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