Very valuable discussion of the atmospheric conditions in and about woodlands; temperature, evaporation, etc., in open and wooded areas. Not written from the process standpoint, but capable of such an interpretation. (See [Figures 6] and [7].)
Adams, Chas. C.
1905. The Postglacial Dispersal of the North American Biota. Biol. Bull., Vol. IX, pp. 53-71.
Climatic sequences applied to inland habitats and the succession of their associations.
1909. Isle Royale as a Biotic Environment. Ann. Rep. Mich. Geol. Surv. for 1908, pp. 1-56.
An attempt is made to treat the environment and biota from both the dynamic or process standpoint—so far as the present processes are concerned—and genetically with regard to the development of the present conditions.
Ruthven, A. G.
1906. An Ecological Survey in the Porcupine Mountains and Isle Royale, Michigan. Ann. Rep. Mich. Geol. Surv. for 1905, pp. 17-55.
The environment and biotic associations are treated from the dynamic and genetic standpoint.