Natural History of the White-Inyo Range

  CONTRIBUTORS
  PREFACE
  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
 expand sectionINTRODUCTION

 collapse sectionPART I—  PHYSICAL FEATURES
 expand section1—  Weather and Climate
 expand section2—  Geomorphology
 expand section3—  Geologic History of the White-Inyo Range
 expand sectionRoad Logs A, B, C

 collapse sectionPART II—  PLANTS
 collapse section4—  Plant Zones
 Desert Scrub Zone (4,000–6,500 ft, 1,219–1,981 m)
 Pinyon-Juniper Woodland Zone (6,500–9,500 ft, 1,981–2,896 m)
 Subalpine Zone (9,500–11,500 ft, 2,896–3,505 m)
 Alpine Zone (11,500–14,246 ft, 3,505–4,342 m)
 collapse sectionRepresentative Species of Major Plant Zones
 Desert Scrub Zone (4,000–6,500 ft, 1,219–1,981 m)
 Pinyon-Juniper Woodland Zone (6,500–9,500 ft, 1,981–2,896 m)
 Subalpine Zone (9,500–11,5OO ft, 2,896–3,505 m)
 Alpine Zone (11,500–14,246 ft, 3,505–4,342 m)
 References
 expand section5—  Trees
 expand section6—  Shrubs and Flowering Plants

 collapse sectionPART III—  ANIMALS
 expand section7—  Common Insects and Other Arthropods
 expand section8—  Fishes
 expand section9—  Amphibians
 expand section10—  Reptiles
 expand section11—  Breeding Birds
 expand section12—  Mammals

 collapse sectionPART IV—  ARCHAEOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY
 expand section13—  Native Land Use: Archaeology and Anthropology

 expand sectionGLOSSARY
  PLATE SECTION
 expand sectionINDEX

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