Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Last Update: 23 May 2022
Global Unique Identifier: 7c8e755a-e77e-4866-b6d9-db5cfed49421
Digital Metadata:EML File
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Quick SearchBlack Hills State University Herbarium (BHSU-BHSC)The Herbarium has ca. 45,000 specimens and is one of the two largest herbaria in South Dakota. BHSC features the world’s largest collection of the distinctive vascular flora of the ecologically unique Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming. The collection contains vascular plants, algae, bryophytes and lichens. In addition, the collection consists of approximately 4000 specimens of fungi and slime molds, which include nearly all of the South Dakota state records. The extant vascular plant collection includes a limited number of specimens from around the world; including collections by A. Eastwood, P.O. Schallert, L.S. Rose, J.A. Calder, B.C. Tharp, W.H. Duncan, A.E. Radford, J.M. Gillet, C.G. Pringle, O. Degner, P.A. Munz, E.J. Palmer, K. Biswas, and B. Rosengurtt. Other important collections include those of F.L. Bennett (former BHSC Curator) and M.L. Kravig (Orchidologist). BHSC is also home to one of the largest collections of Miocene age plant fossils from the Great Plains of North America, with at least 10,000 fossils housed from throughout the Great Plains. Type collections of several fossil species from J.R. Thomasson and M.L. Gabel are held in the collection. Grasses (Poaceae), hackberries (Celtis, Ulmaceae), sedges (Cyperaceae) and borages (Boraginaceae) are well represented. Contacts:
GBIF Dataset page: http://www.gbif.org/dataset/b6d66b0c-d2eb-44b5-be52-62171411c5ad
Address:Black Hills State University Herbarium 1200 University Jonas Hall #159 Spearfish, South Dakota 57799 USA [1] 605/ 642-6251 Collection Statistics
Extra StatisticsCollection Type: Preserved Specimens Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal Last Update: 23 May 2022 Global Unique Identifier: 7c8e755a-e77e-4866-b6d9-db5cfed49421 Digital Metadata:EML File |
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This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].
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