https://soroherbaria.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=30Colorado State University, Charles Maurer HerbariumSouthern Rocky Mountain Herbariajames.r.allen@colorado.eduhttps://soroherbaria.org/portal/index.phpSouthern Rocky Mountain Herbariajames.r.allen@colorado.eduhttps://soroherbaria.org/portal/index.php2024-03-29engThe Charles Maurer Herbarium Collection is the third largest collection of vascular plants (> 104,000 specimens) and is the oldest herbarium (began in 1883) in the southern Rocky Mountain region. Important collections include those by J. Ackerfield, J. Cassidy, J. H. Cowen, C.S. Crandall, and H.D. Harrington. The herbarium has an excellent representation of the Colorado flora as well as the flora of the southern Rocky Mountain region. These herbarium specimens were the primary bases for the Colorado floras published by Rydberg (1906), Harrington (1954), and Ackerfield (2015).Colorado State University, Charles Maurer Herbarium(970) 491-0496tdewey@rams.colostate.eduhttp://herbarium.biology.colostate.edu/index.htmBiology Department, 1878 Campus DeliveryFort CollinsCO80523-1878United StatesDeweyTanyatdewey@rams.colostate.eduInterim CuratorcontentProviderTo the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the 2024-03-29T03:45:32-07:00Southern Rocky Mountain Herbaria - a1efdcaa-40ca-4195-b588-0a888e07e1bdUTF-8Darwin Core Archivehttps://soroherbaria.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=30CSColorado State University, Charles Maurer Herbariumhttps://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/content/collicon/cs.jpghttp://herbarium.biology.colostate.edu/index.htmhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/DeweyTanyatdewey@rams.colostate.eduInterim Curator<p>The Charles Maurer Herbarium Collection is the third largest collection of vascular plants (> 104,000 specimens) and is the oldest herbarium (began in 1883) in the southern Rocky Mountain region. Important collections include those by J. Ackerfield, J. Cassidy, J. H. Cowen, C.S. Crandall, and H.D. Harrington. The herbarium has an excellent representation of the Colorado flora as well as the flora of the southern Rocky Mountain region. These herbarium specimens were the primary bases for the Colorado floras published by Rydberg (1906), Harrington (1954), and Ackerfield (2015).</p>