Results 271 to 280 of about 230,222 (295)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

A Pellaea of Baja California

American Fern Journal, 1947
While studying the western North American species of the genus Pellaea in the herbarium of the University of California, three sheets of a well-marked and apparently new Pellaea, closely related to Pellaea ternifolia (Cav.) Link, were noted from the "Cape Region" of Baja California. The first collection was made by T. S.
openaire   +2 more sources

Baja California, Domain 1

2007
Ophiolites occur in Baja California along the outer coast from San Benito and Cedros Islands through the Vizcaíno Peninsula to Magdalena and Santa Margarita Islands. This is a mountainous region with altitudes up to 920 m (3018 ft) on the Vizcaíno Peninsula, >300 m (∼1000 ft.) on Magdalena Island, and about 550 m (∼1800 ft) on Santa Margarita Island.
Earl B. Alexander   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Fire Mosaics in Southern California and Northern Baja California [PDF]

open access: possibleScience, 1983
In spite of suppression efforts, severe wildfires burn large areas of southern California grassland, coastal sage scrub, and chaparral. Such large burns may not have been characteristic prior to the initiation of fire suppression more than 70 years ago.
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Nicholas Trist and Baja California

Pacific Historical Review, 1963
AMONG THE LEGENDS which clutter popular accounts of Baja California one of the most persistent asserts that the United States almost obtained the peninsula through conquest and diplomacy in the war with Mexico but failed through the bungling of negotiations by President Polk's agent to Mexico, Nicholas Trist.
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Jesuit Missions in Baja California

The Americas, 1967
Whatever history may record about his personal life, there is no denying that Pope Alexander VI was among the most efficient and far-sighted of the Church’s long list of vicars. Perhaps nowhere is this fact more obvious than in the pontiff’s concern and zeal for the missions.
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A Fern New to Baja California

American Fern Journal, 1947
Asplenium nephelephyllum Copel. Phil. Journ. Sci. Bot. 9: 440. 1914. Copeland's specimens of A. nephelephyllum (Faurie 266 from Waimea, Kauai) match the type of A. dissectum Brack. [i.e., A. schizophyllum] very well. His concept of A. schizophyllum, as evidenced by specimens so named in his herbarium, evidently is based on plants which I would refer to
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The Grasses of Baja California, Mexico [PDF]

open access: possibleTaxon, 1982
Robert B. Shaw   +2 more
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An Expansionist in Baja California, 1855

Pacific Historical Review, 1932
Scarcely had Alta California become the thirty-first commonwealth of the Union, when ambitious schemers began to look covetously toward other Mexican lands to the southward. Notable among the regions to which they turned their attention were Sonora and Baja California.
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Baja California: Late Cretaceous Dinosaurs

Science, 1967
Late Cretaceous dinosaurs have been discovered along the Pacific margin of Baja California. The presence of Hypacrosaurus sp. is suggestive of correlation with the Upper Edmonton Formation, Alberta. Dissimilarities between the Baja California fauna and those from contemporary units along the eastern trend of the ...
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Flora of Baja California

Kew Bulletin, 1981
Ira L. Wiggins, D. R. Hunt
openaire   +2 more sources

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