INHS Collections Data

Dataset: All Collections
Taxa: Amianthium muscitoxicum
Search Criteria: excluding cultivated/captive occurrences

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Illinois Natural History Survey - Plant Collection


ILLS:PLANT
Rev. R. Brinkr   16081941-05-17
United States, Missouri, Ste. Genevieve, 37.8833 -90.2

ILLS:PLANT
Rev. R. Brinker   15811941-05-17
United States, Missouri, Ste. Genevieve, 37.8833 -90.2

ILLS:PLANT
B. King & A.E. Radford   44893 (Radford)1966-07-07
United States, North Carolina, Ashe, Bluff Mountain., 36.390958 -81.571496

ILLS:PLANT
Amianthium muscitoxicum (Walter) A. Gray
Loy R. Phillippe & Robert R. Barber   298151998-08-03
United States, Tennessee, Hickman, Middle Tennessee State University Wildlife Management Area. Directly west northwest (about 10 miles) of Centerville and about 2 miles south of the Duck River. UTM Zone 16, 3961630mN, 448780mE.

ILLS:PLANT
Amianthium muscitoxicum (Walter) A. Gray
Paul B. Marcum, Loy R. Phillippe, Mary Ann Feist, and Jim Payne.   35162005-07-21
United States, North Carolina, Haywood, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Purchase Knob Area. WGS84 map datum., 35.5856 -83.07393, 1494m


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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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