Thursday, September 27, 2007

Articles of note in the Sterling Morton Library : September's Offerings

These are some recent articles that can be found within the journal collection of the Sterling Morton Library. Please visit the Library to discover the incredible botanical and horticultural resources that await you! If you are unable to visit the Library and interested in reviewing one of these articles, I would be delighted to help you at rhassert@mortonarb.org.

Harty, F.M. Prairie hero remembered. Natural Area News, v. 11, no. 2, p. 1, 5.
Tribute to “conservation hero and prairie champion” – Bob Betz.

Kingsbury, N. Urban prairie. Gardens Illustrated, no. 129, p. 40-45.
“Inspired by Chicago’s natural and cultural history, the Lurie Garden brings a native prairie landscape to the city’s impressive Millennium Park. Noël Kinsbury admires designer Piet Oudolf’s bold and sophisticated planting.”

Nowlin, W.H., González, M.J., Vanni M.J., Stevens M.H.H., Fields M.W., et al. Allochthonous subsidy of periodical cicadas affects the dynamics and stability of pond communities. Ecology, v. 88, no. 9, p. 2174–2186.

Purdy, K. Colchicums : autumn’s best-kept secret. The American Gardener, v. 86, no. 5, p. 18-22.

Scott, L., B. Molano-Flores and J.A. Koontz. Comparisons of genetic variation and outcrossing potential between the sensitive species Rudbeckia fulgida var. sullivantii (Asteraceae) and its cultivar. Transactions of the Illinois State Academy of Science, v. 100, no. 2, p. 129-144.

Steinhauer, M., M.A. Brennan, D. McConnell, C. Reinhardt-Adams and D. Sandrock. Visitor responses to an ethnic garden display in a botanical garden. HortTechnology, v. 17, no. 4, p. 537-543.

Friday, September 14, 2007

No doubt about the Rio da Dúvida

Yesterday’s gathering of Leafing Through the Pages, the Sterling Morton Library’s book group, was a spirited discussion of Candace Millard’s River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey. Group participants were spellbound by the adventures of the Brazilian-American crew that surveyed the Rio da Dúvida (River of Doubt later renamed Rio Roosevelt), “a churning, ink-black tributary of the Amazon that winds nearly a thousand miles through the dense Brazilian rain forest.” Led by Cândido Mariano da Silva Rondon, famed explorer and Brazilian military officer, and Theodore Roosevelt, the former U.S. president, the author explores the high adventure, intrigue and drama of this expedition’s exploits. Of particular interest to our discussion was Millard’s riveting description of the challenging terrain and natural history of the region. As the story unfolds, the group discovered the expedition was ill prepared to face the many challenges (those unforeseen and those that probably should have been foreseen) that awaited them in their 1913-1914 expedition. Through diaries, interviews and extensive research, the author presents a compelling story.

Within the Sterling Morton Library, there are a number of resources that will provide further information about Roosevelt and Amazonia:
  • Theodore Roosevelt : the naturalist by Paul Russell Cutright
  • The Rough riders by Theodore Roosevelt
  • Theodore Roosevelt's America : selections from the writings of the Oyster Bay naturalist
  • Margaret Mee's Amazon : paintings of plants from Brazilian Amazonia by Margaret Mee ; text by Simon Mayo
  • Amazon frontier : the defeat of the Brazilian Indians by John Hemming
  • Flowers of the Brazilian forests collected and painted by Margaret Mee
  • A botanist in the Amazon Valley : an account of the flora and fauna in the land of floods by R. Ruggles Gates
  • Travels on the Amazon and Rio Negro : with an account of the native tribes, and observations on the climate, geology, and natural history of the Amazon Valley by Alfred Russel Wallace
  • Naturalist on the River Amazons by Edward Clodd

Additional resources to investigate: