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Arboretum Landscape Teaching Aid Series: A Fence Long Gone Marked A Boundary (3.19498)
Date: 1940 – 1960Creator: Watts, May Theilgaard
Type: Drawing
Description:Primarily textual teaching aid depicting Arboretum landscape. This material shows how a fence once marked a boundary through a forest.
Header: A fence (long gone) marked a boundary through a forest (long gone)
Text and illustrations from top to bottom:
- [Depicted in stylized scroll] The Record:
- 1. A long row of trees: red oaks, white oaks, and ironwood [an illustration of a row of trees]
- 2. the soil profile on both sides of this row [arrow pointing right to illustration of a cross-section of soil]
- Interpreting the record:
- 1) Because red oaks and ironwoods belong in rich (mesophytic) woods, and
- 2) because a thin layer of black soil on top of clay is typical of forests in this area (but not of prairies) and
- 3) because there would have been forest-margin trees, like hawthorn, if this fence had edged a forest - We read the record as above [arrow extending upward to header]
Extent: 1 sheet
The Morton Arboretum Quarterly V. 01 No. 02 (3.34463)
Date: June 21 – September 20 1965Type: Serial
Description:
- Meeting the Shade Problem: Selective Plant Material Suitable for Growing in Shade (1-6)
- The Art of Jens Jensen, Landscape Architect (7)
- Ostrya virginiana (Mill.) K. Koch. Ironwood, American Hornbeam: (Betulaceae) Birch Family (8-9)
- The Control of Some Summer Insect Pests (10-11)
- The May T. Watts Reading Garden (12-14)
- Arboretum News and Notes/ Climatological Summary (14-16)
Extent: 16 pages
The Morton Arboretum Quarterly V. 08 No. 03 (3.34579)
Date: September 21 – December 20 1972Type: Serial
Description:
- Openings in the Woods (33-35)
- Viburnum Portraits by Margaret Stones (36-39)
- The Preservation of Delight (40-43)
- Climatological Summary (43)
- American Linden, Tilia Americana: Linden Family (Tiliaceae) (44-45)
- Arboretum News and Notes (46-47)
- The Lookout (48)
Extent: 16 pages