https://greatlakesinvasives.org:443/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=5University of Notre Dame, Greene/Nieuwland HerbariumGreat Lakes Invasives Networkkmcameron@wisc.eduhttps://greatlakesinvasives.org:443/portal/index.phpGreat Lakes Invasives Networkkmcameron@wisc.eduhttps://greatlakesinvasives.org:443/portal/index.php2024-03-29engThe Greene/Nieuwland Herbarium is used for teaching and research in the study of botany, ecology, evolution, biodiversity and conservation, regional and global environmental change, genetics, natural products chemistry, archeology, and anthropology, to name a few. An official repository for specimens collected by state and federally funded surveys, the Museum of Biodiversity allows more undergraduate and graduate students to experience a vast array of naturally occurring substances--some of which may hold the key to new discoveries in drug treatments for diseases such as cancer.Barbara Hellenthal, CuratorUniversity of Notre Dame, Greene/Nieuwland Herbariumbarbara.j.hellenthal.2@nd.eduhttp://science.nd.edu/about/facilities/jordan/museum-of-biodiversity/CONTENT_PROVIDERUniversity of Notre Dame, Greene/Nieuwland HerbariumBarbara Hellenthal, CuratorCollection ManagerCONTENT_PROVIDERbarbara.j.hellenthal.2@nd.eduTo the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the CC0 1.0 (Public-domain)Users can copy, modify, distribute and perform the work, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.2024-03-29T03:36:58-05:00Great Lakes Invasives Network - 34a4509a-7ee6-4af2-af5b-51a5ba91400bUTF-8Darwin Core Archivehttps://greatlakesinvasives.org:443/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=5NDUniversity of Notre Dame, Greene/Nieuwland Herbariumhttp://greatlakesinvasives.org/portal/content/collicon/ND.jpghttp://science.nd.edu/about/facilities/jordan/museum-of-biodiversity/http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/The Greene/Nieuwland Herbarium is used for teaching and research in the study of botany, ecology, evolution, biodiversity and conservation, regional and global environmental change, genetics, natural products chemistry, archeology, and anthropology, to name a few. An official repository for specimens collected by state and federally funded surveys, the Museum of Biodiversity allows more undergraduate and graduate students to experience a vast array of naturally occurring substances--some of which may hold the key to new discoveries in drug treatments for diseases such as cancer.