Its specimens proved invaluable to John Torrey, Asa Gray, and others.
The specimens identified by Koehler (1907) as A. palmeri proved on re-examination to be wrongly identified, some of them are A. filiformis and some A. grandis.
These specimens are in the Ulster Museum (BEL: F42-F47), but proved to have been incorrectly identified and were specimens of Batrachospermum.
In this time there were few animals left: that poor specimen of a bear proved that to her.
A specimen collected by Trudell in 1920 proved to be a new hybrid, which was named Asplenium x trudellii in his honor by Wherry in 1925.
They collected some specimens and further proved that it was of Shang Dynasty which is older than ruins of Yin Dynasty in An Yang.
The surgical specimen, however, proved to be benign.
However, these distinctions broke down when some specimens from Antarctica proved to be polymict but devoid of magnesium-rich howarditic pyroxenes.
Maxwell and Caldwell (2003) suggested that this specimen proves that Maiaspondylus was viviparous, giving live birth.
It had previously been reported from Santa Rosa County, as well, but these specimens proved to be Conradina canescens.