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University of Colorado Herbarium Databases

Dataset: All Collections
Taxa: Muellerella pygmaea
Search Criteria: excluding cultivated/captive occurrences

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Page 1, records 1-7 of 7

University of Colorado Museum of Natural History Herbarium Lichen Collection


COLO:L
Muellerella pygmaea (Körb.) D. Hawksw.
COLO-L-0027249William A. Weber   L 359831964-09-11
United States, Oregon, Lane, rocky summit of Fairview Mountain, above Bohemia Mines, southeast of Cottage Grove, 1798m

COLO:L
Muellerella pygmaea (Körb.) D. Hawksw.
COLO-L-0027255T. Elliot Weier   13801972-10-13
United States, California, Alpine, east fork Carson River, first canyon north of junction of SR 4 and 89, Poison canyon, Topaz Quadrangle, 1676m

COLO:L
Muellerella pygmaea (Körb.) D. Hawksw.
COLO-L-0027261S. Shushan; W.A. Weber   S52801955-05-12
United States, Colorado, Mesa, North end of Colorado National Monument, ca. 3 mi. south of Fruita, at mouth of Fruita Canyon, 1402m

COLO:L
Muellerella pygmaea (Körb.) D. Hawksw.
COLO-L-0027267R.A. Anderson   35961962-08-26
United States, Colorado, Larimer, Rocky Mountain National Park, Mummy Range, Fairchild Mountain from Saddle on the north over the summit to the alpine ridge extending 2 miles to the southeast, 3566 - 4115m

COLO:L
Muellerella pygmaea (Körb.) D. Hawksw.
COLO-L-0027273Sam Shushan; W.A. Weber   S 52191955-05-12
United States, Colorado, Mesa, North end of Colorado National Monument, ca. 3 miles south of Fruita, mesatop above Coke ovens overlook, 1890m

COLO:L
Muellerella pygmaea (Körb.) D. Hawksw.
COLO-L-0043794Sam Shushan   S 78891955-06-12
United States, New Mexico, San Juan, box canyon, 7 miles east of Blanco, 1676m

COLO:L
Muellerella pygmaea (Körb.) D. Hawksw.
COLO-L-0104053Erin Manzitto-Tripp; Seth Raynor & Jacob Watts   100542023-08-08
United States, Colorado, Grand, Arapaho National Forest, very steep knife edge between North Arapaho and South Arapaho Peaks, 40.023333 -105.652778, 68m


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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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