Mississippi – Historical Archaeology https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/histarch/research/mississippi/
Find out about our ongoing research in Mississippi.
Eyewitness Accounts The Colonists The Fort and Settlement The Fountain of Youth Park
Find out about our ongoing research in Mississippi.
Eyewitness Accounts The Colonists The Fort and Settlement The Fountain of Youth Park
St. Augustine, FL
Eyewitness Accounts The Colonists The Fort and Settlement The Fountain of Youth Park
COMING SOON!
Archaic Period Plant Remains Animal Remains Soils Gallery Traders Cove National Park
The critically endangered Schaus’ Swallowtail (Heraclides aristodemus ponceanus) is a large, iconic butterfly found in South Florida. Historically, the butterfly inhabited dense upland forests called tropical hardwood hammocks from the greater Miami area south through the Florida Keys. Habitat loss
occur on Key Largo, the main population resides on islands in Biscayne National Park
Teaching
Archaic Period Plant Remains Animal Remains Soils Gallery Traders Cove National Park
You can see many of the actual objects from this exhibit in St. Augustine, both in the St. Augustine Colonial Experience Living History Tour and at the many other Museum sites in St. Augustine. The Governor’s House Cultural Center and Museum The St. Augustine Historical Society Museum at t
George Street The Fountain of Youth Park Site Museum on Magnolia Avenue First Colony
Find out about our field excavations and what we have learned.
Eyewitness Accounts The Colonists The Fort and Settlement The Fountain of Youth Park
WMFE: Endangered Schaus Butterflies Having Their Best Season In Decades WCJB: What’s Growing On: FDOT pairs with the Florida Museum to increase pollinators IFAS: UF project hopes to ‘certify’ appropriate plants as wildlife-friendly WSVN: Florida scientists find rare bee species in new locat
The spring sun glinted off the cars rolling through Ichetucknee Springs State Park
Florida Museum of Natural History
Tuesday, September 16 9:00 am – 10:45 am Tot Trot: Wildlife Natural Area Park
Pond cypress and bald cypress are the two species of cypress trees found in the Everglades. Two species of cypress reside within the Everglades, the bald cypress (Taxodium distichum) and the pond cypress (Taxodium ascendens). These trees were harvested during the early to mid 1900s. The dur
Photo courtesy National Park Service Meadow beauty (Rhexia virginica).