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Show 609. (311) "God's First Temples. How Shall We Preserve our Forests?"; Kimes #55. (311) "On the Post-Glacial History of Sequoia Gigantea;" Kimes #63. (312) "Species develop . . .": "Summering in the Sierra. A Bit of Forest Study . . ."; Kimes #50. (312) "New Sequoia Forests of California;" Kimes #80. (313) Muir was wrong in many details of his analysis of the Sequoia forests' ecology. See Richard Harlesvelt, H. Thomas Harvey, Howard S. Shellhammer, and Ronald E. Stecker, The Giant Sequoia of the Sierra Nevada (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of Interior, National Park Service, 1975). Like Matthes' book on Sierran geology, this study is structured by the themes Muir discussed. (316) Lester Ward's view of Nature: see Hofstadter, Social Darwinism . . . , p. 74. (316) "The fact is not however a gloomy one . . .": Muir Papers, File #28.18. (317) "I have often tried to understand . . .": "New Sequoia Forests . . . ," p. 824. (317) Warmer's theory: Worster, Nature's Economy, p. 199. (318) "unfortunately man is in the woods . . .": "Post-Glacial History . . . ," p. 252. (319) "unless protective measures . . .": "Post-Glacial History . . . ," p. 253. (320) Hofstadter on William Sumner: Social Darwinism . . . , |