https://soroherbaria.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=463Baylor University HerbariumSouthern Rocky Mountain Herbariajames.r.allen@colorado.eduhttps://soroherbaria.org/portal/index.phpSouthern Rocky Mountain Herbariajames.r.allen@colorado.eduhttps://soroherbaria.org/portal/index.php2024-03-28engThe Baylor University Herbarium was officially founded in 1967 as part of the Department of Biology at Baylor University (BAYLU). Currently located on the 2nd floor, A-wing, of the Baylor Sciences Building, the herbarium was organized by Dr. Floyd F. Davidson in 1967, then chair of the department, with the first curator Ms. Fannie Mae Hurst-Windham. Much of the herbarium is dedicated to Texas flora, though with specimens included from Oklahoma, Louisiana, Central/South America, and China. The herbarium also houses over 200+ specimens from Lindheimer, specifically those specimens near New Braunfels and Comanche Spring. Dr. Walter Holmes, Professor Emeritus of Biology at Baylor University, is the most recent curator of the herbarium who has specialized in the genus Mikania (Asteraceae) with the herbarium containing several types specimens.Baylor University HerbariumJoseph_D_White@baylor.eduDepartment of Biology, One Bear Place #97388WacoTexas76798United StatesJoseph WhiteJoseph_D_White@baylor.educontentProviderTo the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the 2024-03-28T03:28:15-07:00Southern Rocky Mountain Herbaria - c723701e-4a79-4c0c-8906-8450f54af4d9UTF-8Darwin Core Archivehttps://soroherbaria.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=463BAYLUBAYLUBaylor University Herbariumhttps://portal.torcherbaria.org/portal/content/collicon/baylu-baylu.pnghttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/Joseph WhiteJoseph_D_White@baylor.edu<p>The Baylor University Herbarium was officially founded in 1967 as part of the Department of Biology at Baylor University (BAYLU). Currently located on the 2nd floor, A-wing, of the Baylor Sciences Building, the herbarium was organized by Dr. Floyd F. Davidson in 1967, then chair of the department, with the first curator Ms. Fannie Mae Hurst-Windham. Much of the herbarium is dedicated to Texas flora, though with specimens included from Oklahoma, Louisiana, Central/South America, and China. The herbarium also houses over 200+ specimens from Lindheimer, specifically those specimens near New Braunfels and Comanche Spring. Dr. Walter Holmes, Professor Emeritus of Biology at Baylor University, is the most recent curator of the herbarium who has specialized in the genus Mikania (Asteraceae) with the herbarium containing several types specimens.</p>