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Environment, Geology, Natural History, Rivers, Parks

Adams, Kevin, and Martha Casstevens. 1996. Wildflowers of the Southern Appalachians: How to Photograph and Identify Them. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair.

Adkins, Leonard M. 1998. The Appalachian Trail: A Visitor’s Guide [naturalist guidebook]. Birmingham, Ala.: Menasha Ridge Press. 221 pp.

Adkins, Leonard M.; photographs by Joe and Monica Cook. 1999. Wildflowers of the Appalachian Trail [guidebook]. Birmingham, Ala.: Menasha Ridge Press. 128 pp.

Alderman, J. Anthony. 1997. Wildflowers of the Blue Ridge Parkway[field guide]. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 222 pp.

Allen, Thomas J. 1997. The Butterflies of West Virginia and Their Caterpillars. Pitt Series in Nature and Natural History, Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 350 pp.

Alligood , Leon . 1996. "State of the Forest: Doing Right by the Trees." Southern Exposure 24 (Summer): 34-39.

Amjad, Hassan, and Quartel-Ayne Amjad. 1997. “A Preliminary Study of Genus Trillium, Its Systematics, Morphological Variations and Flowering Cycles at the New River Gorge National River” [ W.Va.]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 11-12, 1997, Glade Springs Resort, Daniels, West Virginia, 90-99. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Anderson, Larry. 2002. Benton MacKaye: Conservationist, Planner, and Creator of the Appalachian Trail. Creating the North American Landscape. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 452 pp.

Anderson, Larry. 2002. Benton MacKaye: Conservationist, Planner, and Creator of the Appalachian Trail. Creating the North American Landscape. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 452 pp.

Appalachia and the Environment. 1995. Special issue. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 12 (Spring): 1-40.

Ausband, Stephen C. 2002. Byrd’s Line: A Natural History [1728 survey of Va.-N.C. boundary]. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. 187 pp.

Ayers, Harvard, Jenny Hager, and Charles E. Little, eds.; photographs by Jenny Hager. 1998. An Appalachian Tragedy: Air Pollution and Tree Death in the Eastern Forests of North America [essays; photographs]. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. 216 pp.

Badger, Robert L. 1999. Geology along Skyline Drive: Shenandoah National Park, Virginia. Helena, Mont.: Falcon Publishing. 100 pp.

Baldwin, Fred D. 1999. “Clean Water: North Carolina’s Straight-Pipe Elimination Project” [Madison Co., wastewater problem; state assistance]. Appalachia: Journal of the Appalachian Regional Commission 32 (September-December): 22-27.

Barnes, Thomas G. 2002. Kentucky’s Last Great Places [landscape, nature photography]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 204 pp.

Barnes, Thomas G., and S. Wilson Francis. 2004. Wildflowers and Ferns of Kentucky [guidebook; 650 species; 500 color photos]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 344 pp.

Barrick, Michael. 2001. “Keeping West Virginia GREEN” [ W.Va. parks as stewards of natural resources]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Winter): 34-38.

Bartlett, Richard A. 1995. Troubled Waters: Champion International and the Pigeon River Controversy. Outdoor Tennessee Series. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 376 pp.

Bauman, Russell, and Chris Lucash. 1998. “Recovery of the Red Wolf” [interview with biologist for Southern Appalachian Reintroduction Project]. Foxfire Magazine 32 (Spring/Summer): 60-70.

Behrend, Linda. 2001. “East Tennessee Journeys: The Photographs of Fred W. Behrend” [1896-1976; six photos]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Spring): 9-12.

Bentley, Stanley L. 2000. Native Orchids of the Southern Appalachian Mountains [199 photos; 52 species; 57 maps]. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 235 pp.

Berry, Wendell. 1995. Another Turn of the Crank: Essays. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. 109 pp.

Berry, Wendell. 2000. Life is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. 124 pp.

Berry, Wendell. 2002. The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays of Wendell Berry [21 essays; 1977-99]. Edited by Norman Wirzba. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. 330 pp.

Black, Brian. 1997. “Recasting the Unalterable Order of Nature: Photography and the First Oil Boom [1860s northeastern Pa., landscape]. Pennsylvania History 64 (Spring): 275-299.

Blouin, Nicole, Steve Bordonaro, and Marilou Wier Bordonaro. 2003. Waterfalls of the Blue Ridge: A Hiking Guide to the Cascades of the Blue Ridge Mountains [approx. 100 falls]. Third edition. Birmingham, Ala.: Menasha Ridge Press. 195 pp.

Bolgiano, Chris. 1998. “Communities in Crisis” [habitat loss; salamanders]. In An Appalachian Tragedy: Air Pollution and Tree Death in the Eastern Forests of North America, eds. H. Ayers, J. Hager, and C. E. Little, 116-125. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.

Bolgiano, Chris. 1998. The Appalachian Forest: A Search for Roots and Renewal [natural history; cultural impact]. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole Books. 280 pp.

Bolgiano, Chris. 2001. “Confirming Eastern Cougar Presence” [sidebar, Eastern Cougar Foundation]. Wild Earth 11 (Spring): 54-56.

Bolgiano, Chris. 2002. Living in the Appalachian Forest: True Tales of Sustainable Forestry. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole Books. 200 pp.

Bonta, Marcia. 1994. Appalachian Autumn. Pitt Series in Nature  and Natural History. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh   Press. 232 pp.

Bonta, Marcia. 1999. Appalachian Summer [central Pa.; nature diary essays]. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 236 pp.

Branch, Michael, and Daniel Philippon. 1998. “ A Place in the South” [the meaning of “place” to nature writers of Va.’s Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah Valley]. Appalachian Heritage 26 (Winter): 18-25.

Branch, Michael P., and Daniel J. Philippon, eds. 1998. The Height of Our Mountains: Nature Writing from Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah Valley [anthology of 70 selections;1612-1996]. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 448 pp.

Braunschweig, Suzanne H., Erik T. Nilsen, and Thomas F. Wieboldt. 2000. “The Mid-Appalachian Shale Barrens” [ Pa., W.Va., Va.]. In Savannas, Barrens, and Rock Outcrop Plant Communities of North America, ed. R. Anderson, 83-98. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Brewer, Carson. 2004 [1981]. A Wonderment of Mountains: The Great Smokies [collection of conservation columns on mountain places, plants, people; author d. 2003]. Reprint, with a new forward by Sam Venable. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 198 pp. Originally published, Knoxville: Tenpenny Pub.

Bridge, Gavin, and Phil McManus. 1999. “Sticks and Stones: Environmental Narratives and Discursive Regulation in the Forestry and Mining Sectors.” Antipode 32 (January): 10-47.

Broome, Harvey. 2001 [1975]. Out Under the Sky of the Great Smokies: A Personal Journal [1902-1968]. Illustrated by Larry Hirst. Reprint, with a new forword by Michael Frome. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 285 pp. Originally published, Knoxville: Greenbrier Press.

Brown, Margaret Lynn. 1995. "Re-creation of the Wilderness." [ Great Smoky Mountains] Special Section: Eminent Domain. Southern Exposure 23 (Summer): 25-29.

Brown, Margaret Lynn. 2000. The Wild East: A Biography of the Great Smoky Mountains. New Perspectives on the History of the South series. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 457 pp.

Brubaker, John H. 2002. Down the Susquehanna to the Chesapeake [history; N.Y., Pa., Md.]. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. 277 pp.

Buckelew, Albert R., Jr., and George A. Hall. 1994. The West  Virginia Breeding Bird Atlas. Pitt Series in Nature and  Natural History. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.  272 pp.

Buckley, Geoffrey L. 1998. “The Environmental Transformation of an Appalachian Valley, 1850-1906" [western Md.; mineral extraction]. Geographical Review 88 (April): 175-198.

Burkholder, Robert E. 2003. “‘To See Things in Their Wholeness’: Consilience, Natural History, and Teaching Literature Outdoors” [ Appalachian Trail; Penn State Univ. senior seminar]. In Teaching in the Field: Working with Students in the Outdoor Classroom, ed. H. Crimmel, 17-32. Salt Lake City, Utah: University of Utah Press.

Cahalan, James M. 1997. “Part II — ‘My People’: Edward Abbey’s Appalachian Roots in Indiana County, Pennsylvania.” Pittsburgh History 79 (Winter 1996/1997): 160-178.

Cahalan, James M. 2001. Edward Abbey: A Life. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 359 pp.

Camuto, Christopher. 2000 [1997]. Another Country: Journey Toward the Cherokee Mountains [reintroduction of red wolf to Great Smoky Mountains National Park]. Reprint. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 351 pp. Originally published, New York: Henry Holt.

Camuto, Christopher. 2003. Hunting From Home: A Year Afield in the Blue Ridge Mountains [ Va.]. New York: W.W. Norton. 320 pp.

Casner, Nicholas. 1999. “Angler Activist: Kenneth Reid, the Izaak Walton League, and the Crusade for Federal Water Pollution Control [1930s; Pa., W.Va.]. Pennsylvania History 66 (Autumn): 535-553.

Che, Deborah. 2000. “Going to the Mountains: Flatlander, Ohio-sian, and Up-here Deer: Hunters in the Allegheny National Forest Region.” In A Geographic Perspective of Pittsburgh and the Alleghenies: From Precambrian to Post-Industrial, eds. K. Patrick and J. Scarpaci, 148-158. Washington, D.C.: Association of American Geographers.

Chew, V. Collins. 1997. Underfoot: A Geologic Guide to the Appalachian Trail [guidebook]. Second edition. Harpers Ferry, W.Va.: Appalachian Trail Conference.

Cincotta, Daniel A., Douglas B. Chambers, and Terence Messinger. 2000. “Recent Changes in the Distribution of Fish Species in the New River Basin in West Virginia and Virginia” [maps; table]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 15-16, 1999, Boone, North Carolina, 98-106. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Clancy, Patrick. 1997. “Conserving the Youth: The Civilian Conservation Corps Experience in the Shenandoah National Park” [1933-1939]. Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 105 (Autumn): 439-470.

Clark, Jim. 1998. West Virginia: The Allegheny Highlands [photographs]. Englewood, Colo.: Westcliffe Publishers. 119 pp.

Clark, Jim. 2003. Mountain Memories: An Appalachian Sense of Place [nature photography]. Foreword by Kathy Mattea. Morgantown, W.Va.: Vandalia Press. 217 pp.

Clark, Thomas D. 2004 [1984]. The Greening of the South: The Recovery of Land and Forest [lumbering, deforestation]. Reprint. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 168 pp.

Clines, Francis X. 2002. “100-Year Flood, for the Second Straight Year” [ W.Va.]. New York Times, 9 May, 26(A).

Clines, Francis X. 2002. “Flooding in Appalachia Stirs Outrage Over a Mining Method.” New York Times, 12 August, 8(A).

Cogbill, Charles V., Peter S. White, and Susan K. Wiser. 1997. “Predicting Treeline Elevation in the Southern Appalachians.” Castanea 62 (September): 137-146.

Coggins, Allen R. 1999. Place Names of the Smokies. Gatlinburg, Tenn.: Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association. 167 pp.

Comp, T. Allan. 1997. “The Art Thing: New Partners in Old Coalfields” [community arts involvement addressing acid mine drainage in Southwestern Pa.]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 14 (Winter): 25-28.

Constantz, George. 1994. Hollows, Peepers, and Highlanders: An  Appalachian Mountain Ecology. Missoula, MT: Mountain Press.  264 pp.

Constantz, George. 2004 [1994]. Hollows, Peepers, and Highlanders: An Appalachian Mountain Ecology. Second edition. Morgantown: West Virginia University Press. 359 pp. Originally published, Missoula, Mont.: Mountain Press.

Crawford, Colin. 1996. Uproar at Dancing Rabbit Creek: Battling Over Race, Class, and the Environment. [Noxubee County, Miss.; hazardous waste] Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley. 384 pp.

Crews, Alvin, and David Carlock. 1998. “The Bear Facts” [black bears in Ga.; interview with wildlife biologist]. Foxfire Magazine 32 (Fall/Winter): 120-127.

Crockett, Maureen. 2004. Jewels in Our Crown: The State Parks of West Virginia [37 parks]. With photographs by Stephen J. Shaluta, Jr. Charleston, W.Va.: Quarrier Press. 130 pp.

Crowe, Thomas Rain. 2003. “The New Naturalists (The Southern Appalachian Mountains Are The Place To Look).” Nantahala: A Review of Writing and Photography in Appalachia 2, no. 1 (Spring): nonfiction section, 18 para. Online at http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/nreview/issue2-1/non-fiction/crowe.html.

Crutchfield, John. 2004. “Return to Mount Le Conte Or, A Short Treatise on Memory, Responsibility, and the American Black Bear” [author’s 2003 backpacking trek in Great Smoky Mountains with his mother on her 60 th birthday]. Appalachian Journal 32 (Fall): 114-122.

Dann, Kevin. 2000. “The Appalachian Trail and the American Primeval” [trail originator Benton MacKaye’s inspiration]. In Across the Great Border Fault: The Naturalist Myth in America, 35-50. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press.

Davis, Donald Edward. 2000. Where There Are Mountains: An Environmental History of the Southern Appalachians [landmark text]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 320 pp.

Davis, Timothy, Todd A. Croteau, and Christopher H. Marston, eds. 2004. America’s National Park Roads and Parkways: Drawings from the Historic American Engineering Record [331 oversize historic, interpretive drawings of roads, bridges, viaducts, tunnels; includes Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah National Parks, and Blue Ridge Parkway]. The Road and American Culture. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 379 pp.

De Hart, Allen. 2003. The Trails of Virginia: Hiking the Old Dominion [guidebook to 1400 trails state-wide]. Third edition. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 540 pp.

Dick, David, and Eulalie C. Dick. 2001. Rivers of Kentucky [visits to 38 rivers: lore, local history and literature, personalities]. Foreword by Gurney Norman. North Middletown, Ky.: Plum Lick Publishing, Inc. 265 pp.

Dixon, Sherie, and Bill Tanner. 1998. “The Tallulah Gorge” [oral history interview with superintendent of Tallulah Gorge State Park, Ga.]. Foxfire Magazine 32 (Fall/Winter): 106-119.

Dodd, C. Kenneth, Jr. 2004. The Amphibians of Great Smoky Mountains National Park [guidebook to salamanders and frogs]. Illustrations by Jacqualine Grant. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 283 pp.

Douglas, Joseph C. 2004. “Minerals, Moonshine, and Misanthropes: The Historic Use of Caves in the Upper Cumberland” [Ky, Tenn.; saltpeter, food storage, Indian mortuary, criminal hideout]. In Rural Life and Culture in the Upper Cumberland, eds. M. Birdwell and W. Dickinson, 15-34. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.

Duda, Mark Damian. 1999. West Virginia Wildlife Viewing Guide [63 locations]. Helena, Mont.: Falcon Publishing. 95 pp.

Ellis, William E. 2000. The Kentucky River [social history; geography; photos]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 226 pp.

Engle, Reed L. 1999. Everything Was Wonderful: A Pictorial History of the Civilian Conservation Corps in Shenandoah National Park [Va.; 1930s]. Luray, Va.: Shenandoah Natural History Association. 109 pp.

Faiers, Gregory E. 2000. “Lightning Damage in Pennsylvania: 1959-1998” [Pa. incurs more damage than any other state; maps, tables]. Pennsylvania Geographer 37 (Fall/Winter): 141-158.

Feldman, David Lewis, and Lyndsay Moseley. 2003. “Faith-Based Environmental Initiatives in Appalachia: Connecting Faith, Environmental Concern and Reform” [examines 20 faith-based organizations]. World Views: Environment, Culture, Religion 7 (November): 227-252.

Feldman, David Lewis. 2001. “Going Thirsty? Appalachia Faces Water Supply Problems” [droughts, demand, laws]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Spring): 3-8.

Ford, W. Mark, Michael A. Menzel, and Richard H. Odom. 2002. “Elevation, Aspect, and Cove Size Effects on Southern Appalachian Salamanders” [Ga., N.C., S.C.]. Southeastern Naturalist 1 (December): 315-324.

Forests--The Way They Were [law to protect Savage River State Forest, Md.]. 2002. State Legislatures 28 (July): 15.

Fortney, Ronald H., James Rentch, Harold S. Adams, and Steven Stephenson. 1997. “Vegetation of the Bluestone River Gorge in Southern West Virginia.” In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 11-12, 1997, Glade Springs Resort, Daniels, West Virginia, 11-19. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Fraser, Rory, Steve Hollenhorst, and Alan Collins. 1999. “Shades of Green: Public Opinion and the Economics of Environmental Protection in West Virginia” [tables]. In Inside West Virginia: Public Policy Perspectives for the 21 st Century, eds. B. Keith and R. Althouse, 107-133. Morgantown: West Virginia University Press.

Frome, Michael. 2002. “Protecting the Public Options” [keynote address, Fontana Conservation Roundup, Fontana, N.C., 1975]. In Greenspeak: Fifty Years of Environmental Muckraking and Advocacy, by M. Frome, 66-80. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.

Gaddy, L. L. 2000. A Naturalist’s Guide to the Southern Blue Ridge Front: Linville Gorge, North Carolina, to Tallulah Gorge, Georgia [hiking; 49 natural areas]. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. 190 pp.

Garland, Mark S., and John Anderton, illustrator. 1997. Watching Nature: A Mid-Atlantic Natural History [Va., W.Va., and Middle Atlantic states]. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. 256 pp.

Garnette, Bill. 2000. “A Spruce Knob Miracle” [1946 Navy pilot crash/rescue and other fatal wrecks on W.Va.’s highest peak]. Goldenseal: West Virginia Traditional Life 26 (Fall): 56-65.

Gilfillan, Merrill. 1997. Burnt House to Paw Paw: Appalachian Notes [natural history; travels]. Profile Series, 3. Stockbridge, Mass.: Hard Press, Inc. 132 pp.

Gray, Sam. 2004. “I-26 and the Will of God” [N.C., Tenn.; poem-essay]. Nantahala: A Review of Writing and Photography in Appalachia 2, no. 2 (Winter-Spring): Non-Fiction section, 16 paras. Online at http://nantahalareview.org/issue2-2/non-fiction/GRAY.htm.

Haag, Kim H., and Stephen D. Porter. 1995. Water-Quality Assessment of the Kentucky River Basin, Kentucky: Nutrients, Sediments, and Pesticides in Streams, 1987-90. Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4227. Louisville: U.S. Geological Survey.

Hallowell, Barbara G. 1998. Mountain Year: A Southern Appalachian Nature Notebook [80 brief essays; month-by-month]. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair. 290 pp.

Haney, J. Christopher, David S. Lee, and Mark Wilbert. 2001. “A Half-Century Comparison of Breeding Birds in the Southern Appalachians” [Unicoi Mts.; N.C., Tenn.]. The Condor 103 (May): 268-277.

Hart, Pete. 2000. “Managing a Non-Traditional River Park” [W.Va.; New River Gorge National River (53 mi.); Gauley River National Recreation Area (26 mi.); Bluestone National Scenic River (10 mi.)]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 15-16, 1999, Boone, North Carolina, 1-9. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Hart, William A., Jr. 1997. “George Masa: The Best Mountaineer” [1881-1933; Japanese-American photographer/mapper of the Great Smoky Mountains]. In May We All Remember Well: A Journal of the History & Cultures of Western North Carolina, Vol. 1, ed. R. S. Brunk, 249-275. Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services Inc.

Hemmerly, Thomas E. 2000. Appalachian Wildflowers [field guide; Ala. to Quebec]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 344 pp.

Holland, Dorothy. 2003. “Multiple Identities in Practice: On the Dilemmas of Being a Hunter and an Environmentalist in the U.S.” [hunters faced with loss of commons land side with environmentalists]. Focaal - European Journal of Anthropology 42: 31-49.

Hopkins, Bruce, and Willard Clay. 1996. Smithsonian Guides to Natural America: Central Appalachia -- West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee. Washington: Smithsonian Books.

Horan, Jack. 1997. Where Nature Reigns: The Wilderness Areas of the SouthernAppalachians. Asheboro, N.C.: Down Home Press. 280 pp.

Horning, Audrey J. 2000. “Shenandoah’s Secret History” [settlement sites explored in Nicholson, Corbin, and Weakley hollows -- displaced by 1930s national park; Va.]. Archaeology 53 (January/February): 44-51.

Howell, Benita J. 2002. “Appalachian Culture and Environmental Planning: Expanding the Role of the Cultural Sciences.” In Culture, Environment, and Conservation in the Appalachian South, ed. B. Howell, 1-16. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

Howell, Benita J., ed. 2002. Culture, Environment, and Conservation in the Appalachian South [11 case studies]. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. 203 pp.

Hufford, Mary. 1995. “Stalking the Mother Forest: Voices Beneath the Canopy.” [Raleigh County, W.Va.] Folklife Center News (Library of Congress) 17, no. 3 (Summer): 10-18, 20.

Hufford, Mary. 1998. “Tending the Commons: Ramp Suppers, Biodiversity, and the Integrity of ‘The Mountains’” [Big Coal River, W.Va.]. Folklife Center News (Library of Congress) 20, no. 4 (Fall): 3-11.

Hufford, Mary. 1998. “Weathering the Storm: Cultural Survival in an Appalachian Valley” [Coal River, W.Va.]. In An Appalachian Tragedy: Air Pollution and Tree Death in the Eastern Forests of North America, eds. H. Ayers, J. Hager, and C. E. Little, 146-159. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.

Hufford, Mary. 1999. “Working in the Cracks: Public Space, Ecological Crisis, and the Folklorist” [W.Va.; New River Gorge and Coal River; strip mining]. Journal of Folklore Research 36 (May-December): 157-167.

Hufford, Mary. 2002. “Interrupting the Monologue: Folklore, Ethnography, and Critical Regionalism” [with comments on “Appalachia as a Global Region: Toward Critical Regionalism and Civic Professionalism” by Herbert Reid and Betsy Taylor, Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (Spring 2002): 9-32]. Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (Spring 2002): 62-78.

Hufford, Mary. 2002. “Reclaiming the Commons: Narratives of Progress, Preservation, and Ginseng” [W.Va.]. In Culture, Environment, and Conservation in the Appalachian South, ed. B. Howell, 100-120. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

Hullihen Williams Moore. 2004. Shenandoah: Views of Our National Park [essays; 51 duotone prints]. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. 89 pp.

Hyde, Arnout, Jr., and Ken Sullivan. 1994. The Potomac: A  Nation's River. Charleston, WV: Cannon Graphics. 127 pp.

Jones, Robert Emmet, Mark J. Fly, and H. Ken Cordell. 1999. “How Green Is My Valley?: Tracking Rural and Urban Environmentalism in the Southern Appalachian Ecoregion” [1239 telephone interviews]. Rural Sociology 64 (September): 482-499.

Kaiser, Jocelyn. 1999. “Great Smokies Species Census Under Way.” Science, 11 June, 1747-1748.

Knott, John R. 2002. “Into the Woods with Wendell Berry.” Chap. 5 in Imagining Wild America, 133-161. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Lafon, Charles W. 2000. “Spatial Patterns of Ice Storm Occurrence in the New River Valley” [county outline maps]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 15-16, 1999, Boone, North Carolina, 68-77. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Lane, John, and Gerald Thurmond, eds. 1999. The Woods Stretched for Miles: New Nature Writing from the South [18 essays: five Appalachian]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 255 pp.

Lane, John. 2002. Waist Deep in Black Water [personal accounts; Spartanburg, S.C.]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 187 pp.

Lane, John. 2004. “The Myth of the Chattooga: A Personal History” [excerpt from Chattooga: Descending into the Myth of Deliverance River (University of Georgia Press, 2004)]. Nantahala: A Review of Writing and Photography in Appalachia 2, no. 2 (Winter-Spring): Non-Fiction section, 75 paras. Online at http://nantahalareview.org/issue2-2/non-fiction/LANE.htm.

Lane, John. 2004. Chattooga: Descending into the Myth of Deliverance River [Ga.-S.C. border; Deliverance, 1970 novel by James Dickey and 1972 film]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 210 pp.

Lecce, Scott A. 2000. “Seasonality of Flooding in North Carolina” [maps; figures]. Southeastern Geographer 40 (November): 168-175.

Lefohn, Allen S., William Jackson, and Douglas S. Shadwick. 1997. “Effect of Surface Ozone Exposures on Vegetation Grown in the Southern Appalachian Mountains: Identification of Possible Areas of Concern.” Atmospheric Environment (Oxford, England) 31 (June): 1695-1708.

Lembke, Janet. 2004. Skinny Dipping: And Other Immersions in Water, Myth, and Being Human [western Va.; personal essays]. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. 177 pp.

Liftig, Inez Fugate. 2001. “Lessons from Ganderbill Holler” [1950s Ky.; award-winning science teacher remembers girlhood forests and streams as her first classroom]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Spring): 13-17.

Linzey, Donald W. 2000. “Cougars in the Southern Appalachians” [Va.]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 15-16, 1999, Boone, North Carolina, 10-14. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Logsdon, Gene. 2001. The Man Who Created Paradise: A Fable [Wally Spero’s reclaimed strip-mine land; Ohio]. Forward by Wendell Berry, photographs by Gregory Spaid. Athens: Ohio University Press. 58 pp.

Loucks, Orie. 1998. “In Changing Forests, A Search for Answers” [southern W.Va.; Ohio Valley]. In An Appalachian Tragedy: Air Pollution and Tree Death in the Eastern Forests of North America, eds. H. Ayers, J. Hager, and C. E. Little, 84-97. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.

Maehr, David. 2001. “Restoring the Large Mammal Fauna in the East: What Follows the Elk? Wild Earth 11 (Spring): 50-53.

Mannion, Elgin. 2002. “What’s in a Name? Methodological Changes in Environmental Risk Assessment” [politics, EPA, regulatory reform]. Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (Fall): 309-331.

Markham, Doug. 1997. Boxes, Rockets, and Pens: A History of Wildlife Recovery in Tennessee. Outdoor Tennessee Series. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 144 pp.; 16 pp. of plates.

Marshall, Suzanne. 2002. “Lord, We’re Just Trying to Save Your Water”: Environmental Activism and Dissent in the Appalachian South [Ga., Ala., N.C.]. Southern Dissent. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 384 pp.

Mathews, Louise, and Carol Harden. 1999. “150 Years of Environmental Degradation and Reclamation in the Copper Basin, Tennessee” [Polk Co.; treeless landscape; copper mining]. Southeastern Geographer 39 (May): 1-21.

Maynard, Charles W. 2004. The Appalachians [elementary audience, ages 9-12]. Great Mountain Ranges of the World. New York: PowerKids Press. 24 pp.

Medina, Barbara F., and Victor Medina. 2002. Southern Appalachian Wildflowers: A Field Guide to Common Wildflowers of the Southern Appalachian Mountains, Including Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the Blue Ridge Parkway, and the Chattahoochee National Forest. Guilford, Conn.: Falcon. 215 pp.

Messick, Robert. 2001. “Stalking Ancient Forests in the Southern Appalachians” [logging]. Wild Earth 11 (Spring): 72-75.

Michael, Edwin Daryl. 2002. A Valley Called Canaan: 1885-2002 [historical novel; Canaan Valley, W.Va., natural history]. Parsons, W.Va.: McClain Printing Company. 223 pp.

Michaels, Art. 2003. Pennsylvania Overlooks: A Guide for Sightseers and Outdoor People [47 park and forest vistas]. State College: Pennsylvania State University Press. 240 pp.

Miller, E. Willard, ed. 1995. A Geography of Pennsylvania. University Park: Pennsylvania State University. 406 pp.

Minick, Jim. 1997. “Fingerprint” [journal entries: 1994 ice storm, loggers and logging]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 11-12, 1997, Glade Springs Resort, Daniels, West Virginia, 120-125. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Minteer, Ben A. 2001. “Wilderness and the Wise Province: Benton MacKaye’s Pragmatic Vision.” Philosophy and Geography 4 (no. 2): 185-202.

Mitchell, Michael S., and Roger A. Powell. 2003. “Response of Black Bears to Forest Management in the Southern Appalachian Mountains.” Journal of Wildlife Management 67 (October): 692-705.

Mitchell, Michael S., John W. Zimmerman, and Roger A. Powell. 2002. “Test of a Habitat Suitability Index for Black Bears in the Southern Appalachians.” Wildlife Society Bulletin 30 (Fall): 794-808.

Mohlenbrock, Robert H. 1999. “Bountiful Barrens” [Kate’s Mountain, Greenbrier State Forest, W.Va.; rare plants, hiking trails, 1903 discovery]. Natural History 108 (October): 12-15.

Mohlenbrock, Robert H. 1999. “Bountiful Barrens” [Kate’s Mountain, Greenbrier State Forest, W.Va.; rare plants, hiking trails, 1903 discovery]. Natural History 108 (October): 12-15.

Mohlenbrock, Robert H. 2002. “Through the Stone Door” [Savage Gulf State Natural Area; Cumberland Plateau canyons, Tenn.]. Natural History 111 (November): 66-67.

Monfredo, William. 2000. “Significant Tornado Activity in Southwestern Pennsylvania” [historically high risk; tables]. Pennsylvania Geographer 37 (Fall/Winter): 43-63.

Montrie, Chad. 2000. “Expedient Environmentalism: Opposition to Coal Surface Mining in Appalachia and the United Mine Workers of America, 1945-1977.” Environmental History 5 (January): 75-98.

Moore, Harry L. 1994. A Geologic Trip Across Tennessee By Interstate 40. Outdoor Tennessee Series. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 339 pp.

Moore, Wayne. 1995. "Damming the Valley." [TVA] Special Section: Eminent Domain. Southern Exposure 23 (Summer): 30-36.

Nash, Steve. 1999. Blue Ridge 2020: An Owner’s Manual [ecology; environmental risks]. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 211 pp.

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Newfont, Kathryn. 2000. Review essay of Where There Are Mountains: An Environmental History of the Southern Appalachians, by Donald Edward Davis (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2000). Appalachian Journal 28 (Fall): 130-136.

Nicholson, Charles P. 1997. Atlas of the Breeding Birds of Tennessee [170 species]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 426 pp.

Nickens, T. Edward. 2002. “Saving Our Bald Spots” [mountain balds; species]. Audubon 104 (September): 24-29.

Nickens, T. Edward. 2003. “Jocassee’s Gems” [Jocassee Gorge biodiversity; N.C./S.C.]. National Wildlife 41 (August/September): 39-46.

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Noblitt, Phil. 1994. "The Blue Ridge Parkway and Myths of the  Pioneer." Appalachian Journal 21 (Summer): 394-409.

Nourse, Hugh, and Carol Nourse. 2000. Wildflowers of Georgia [85 color photos]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 120 pp.

Olson, Ted. 2003. “In the Public Interest?: The Social and Cultural Impact of the Blue Ridge Parkway, a Depression-Era Appalachian ‘Public Works’ Project.” In The New Deal and Beyond: Social Welfare in the South since 1930, ed. E. Green, 100-115. Athens: University of Georgia Press.

Palmer, Tim. 1996. “Chapter Two: Appalachian Rivers of Green.” In America By Rivers, 45-79. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

Palmer-Ball, Brainard L., Jr. 1996. The Kentucky Breeding Bird Atlas. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 384 pp.

Pederson, Daniel. 1999. “The Search for Hidden Life” [taxonomic project to catalog every species of plant and animal in Great Smoky Mountains National Park]. Newsweek, 22 November, 82-83.

Phillips, Douglas Jay. 2002. Discovering Alabama Wetlands. Photographs by Robert P. Falls. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 128 pp.

Pierce, Daniel S. 2000. The Great Smokies: From Natural Habitat to National Park. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 296 pp.

Pierce, Daniel S. 2003. “The Road to Nowhere: Tourism Development versus Environmentalism in the Great Smoky Mountains.” In Southern Journeys: Tourism, History, and Culture in the Modern South, ed. R. Starnes, 196-214. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.

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Prytherch, David L. 2000. “Digging Themselves a Hole: Dredging and the Changing Value of Western Pennsylvania’s Rivers” [Allegheny and Ohio Rivers]. Pennsylvania Geographer 37 (Fall/Winter): 159-194.

Purvis, Jesse M., and Lisa Wilson. 2000. “Hydrologic Influences on Fecal Coliform Bacteria in a Tributary to New River Gorge National River.” In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 15-16, 1999, Boone, North Carolina, 24-31. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Ray, Janisse. 1999. Ecology of a Cracker Childhood [southern Ga.; forest ecology; biography]. Minneapolis, Minn.: Milkweed Editions. 285 pp.

Reiter, Chris. 2001. “Puc Puggy Lives! In the Footsteps of William Bartram, a Corps of Scientists and Volunteers Surveys the Biodiversity of the Appalachian Trail.” Wild Earth 11 (Spring): 82-86.

Remo, Jonathan W. F., and J. Steven Kite. 2000. “Geologic Controls on Landslides in the New River Gorge, West Virginia” [between Hinton and Fayette Station]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 15-16, 1999, Boone, North Carolina, 87-97. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

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Roody, William C. 2002. Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians [identification guide; 400 species; color photos]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 520 pp.

Roth, Richard A. 2000. “American Heritage Rivers: A New Model for Watershed Planning in Appalachia.” In A Geographic Perspective of Pittsburgh and the Alleghenies: From Precambrian to Post-Industrial, eds. K. Patrick and J. Scarpaci, 196-203. Washington, D.C.: Association of American Geographers.

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Shaluta, Steve, Jr. 2004. The State Parks of West Virginia [full-page color photos]. Charleston, W.Va.: Quarrier Press. 60 pp.

Sharber, Chad, and Alan Mills. 2000. “Defending the Wilderness” [Rockcastle Co., Ky.: Anglin Falls: John B. Stephenson Memorial Forest]. Appalachian Heritage 28 (Spring): 10-12.

Sharp, Llyn. 2000. “Water Quality Education for Teachers in the New River Valley” [Va.; Save Our Streams; K-12]. In Proceedings, New River Symposium, April 15-16, 1999, Boone, North Carolina, 32-41. Glen Jean, W.Va.: National Park Service.

Sheffield, Ben. 1997. “Black Rock Mountain State Park” [Rabun County, Ga.; interview]. Foxfire Magazine 31 (Fall/Winter): 119-127.

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Silver, Timothy. 2003. Mount Mitchell and the Black Mountains: An Environmental History of the Highest Peaks in Eastern America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 322 pp.

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Smith, Richard M. 1998. Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains [Blue Ridge focus; 1200 species; 600 photos]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 456 pp.

Smith, Thomas G. 1999. “Voice For Wild and Scenic Rivers: John P. Saylor of Pennsylvania” [1950s-60s]. Pennsylvania History 66 (Autumn): 554-579.

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Summers, Chuck. 1999. A Year in the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area [Tenn./Ky.; photographs]. Foreword by Howard Baker, Jr. Jellico, Tenn.: Contemplative Images. 48 pp.

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Swanson, Robert E., and Frances R. Swanson. 1994. A Field Guide  to the Trees and Shrubs of the Southern Appalachians.  Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 368 pp.

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Wadley, Jeff, and Dwight McCarter. 2002. Mayday! Mayday! Aircraft Crashes in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 1920-2000. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 212 pp.

Waller, Robert A. 2003. “The Civilian Conservation Corps and the Emergence of South Carolina’s State Park System, 1933-1942” [four of the 17 parks are in Appalachian counties]. South Carolina Historical Magazine 104 (April): 101-125.

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