https://www.lichenportal.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=85Milwaukee Public MuseumConsortium of Lichen HerbariaCNALH.help@gmail.comhttps://www.lichenportal.org/portal/index.phpConsortium of Lichen HerbariaCNALH.help@gmail.comhttps://www.lichenportal.org/portal/index.php2024-03-28engThe MPM herbarium (MIL) began with a donation of 5,190 plant specimens in 1883 to the new City of Milwaukee Museum from the Wisconsin Natural History Society. This early collection has some of the oldest material in the herbarium, dating back to the 1850s and is heavily European in origin. Today the collections number around 250,000 specimens including ca. 70 type specimens with over 50% of the material from Wisconsin and another 30% from the rest of North America. The collections are divided into vascular (107,000 records) and nonvascular (17,000 records) plants with associated data digitized.Milwaukee Public Museumtyrrell@mpm.eduhttp://www.mpm.edu/research-collections/botanyChristopher Tyrrell, Collection Managertyrrell@mpm.educontentProviderTo the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the 2024-03-28T04:22:44-07:00Consortium of Lichen Herbaria - f0b746fe-0717-4b29-9d58-88aea51a0695UTF-8Darwin Core Archivehttps://www.lichenportal.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=85MILMilwaukee Public Museumhttps://lichenportal.org/cnalh/content/collicon/mil.jpghttp://www.mpm.edu/research-collections/botanyhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/Christopher Tyrrell, Collection Managertyrrell@mpm.eduThe MPM herbarium (MIL) began with a donation of 5,190 plant specimens in 1883 to the new City of Milwaukee Museum from the Wisconsin Natural History Society. This early collection has some of the oldest material in the herbarium, dating back to the 1850s and is heavily European in origin. Today the collections number around 250,000 specimens including ca. 70 type specimens with over 50% of the material from Wisconsin and another 30% from the rest of North America. The collections are divided into vascular (107,000 records) and nonvascular (17,000 records) plants with associated data digitized.