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Specimen Record

ContinentNorth America
CountryUnited States
State/ProvinceNorth Carolina
County/ParishMacon
LocalityHighlands.
Latitude35.0525
Longitude-83.196768
Institution CodeNcu
Collection CodeFungi
Catalog NumberNcu-f-0012466
Collected ByCoker, William Chambers; Coker, Louise Venable
Date Collected1943-08-15

Media

From Recordset

https://ncbg.unc.edu/research/unc-herbarium/

The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Herbarium (NCU) is a Department within the North Carolina Botanical Garden of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Important collectors include William Chambers Coker, John Nathaniel Couch, & Arthur Bliss Seymour. NCU also curates vascular plants, macroalgae, lichens, bryophytes, and plant fossils. NCU, located in the center of the UNC-CH campus, welcomes visitors & researchers; contact Curator for information on hours & parking. STATEMENT ON OFFENSIVE CONTENT ON SPECIMEN LABELS: Collection records at NCU may contain language that reflects historical place or taxon names in an original form that is no longer acceptable or appropriate in an inclusive environment. Because NCU preserves data in their original form to retain authenticity and facilitate research, we have chosen to facilitate conversations and are committed to address the problem of racial, derogatory and demeaning language that may be found in our database. Insensitive or offensive language is not condoned by NCU. We recognize the land and sovereignty of Native & Indigenous nations in Chapel Hill, in North Carolina, in North America, and across the world. The North Carolina Botanical Garden and the North Carolina Botanical Garden Foundation acknowledge that the story told about the history of the land we steward has been incomplete. Before the Morgans and Masons, these lands were home to multiple tribes and the ancestors of the Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation, who persist locally to this day. We recognize that at least one of the adjacent lands we steward, Mason Farm Biological Reserve, was first cleared, cultivated, and worked by Native Americans and later by African enslaved people. We invite you to reflect on our individual and community roles in knowing important and untold stories about the land we each steward.

Contacts

Namenone
Rolenone
Emailhelp@mycoportal.org
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Emailmccormick@unc.edu
Name Carol Ann McCormick
RoleHerbarium Curatrix
Emailmccormick@unc.edu
Name Alan Weakley
RoleHerbarium Director
Emailweakley@unc.edu
Name Carol Ann McCormick
RoleHerbarium Curatrix
Emailmccormick@unc.edu
Name Alan Weakley
RoleHerbarium Director
Emailweakley@unc.edu
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