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Collection

David M. Gates papers, 1910-2016

8.8 linear feet (in 9 boxes)

David Murray Gates (1921-2016) was an ecologist who served in numerous roles, including as a professor at the University of Denver (1947-1955); director of the Missouri Botanical Garden (1965-1971); consulting ecologist for General Motors (circa 1970-1978); and, at the University of Michigan, as both a professor of botany and director of the University of Michigan Biological Station (1971-1991). This collection documents Gates's personal and professional life and includes his student notebooks, personal and professional journals and notebooks, correspondence files, and subject files.

This collection documents Gates's personal and professional life. Material is dated from 1910-2016 and includes his student notebooks, personal and professional journals and notebooks, correspondence files, and subject files.

Significant topics in this collection include his presentations to various organizations, such as Sigma Xi chapters; research interests, particularly related to the University of Michigan's Biological Station; professional involvement with organizations such as the Missouri Botanical Society and General Motors; and extracurricular involvement with organizations such as the National Audubon Society and the National Science Foundation.

Collection

Otto Laporte papers, 1926-1970

2 linear feet

Professor of physics at University of Michigan, specialist in the dynamics of fluids at high temperatures and atomic spectroscopy. Research notebooks, manuscripts of writings, and reprints of scientific articles.

The Laporte collection documents only the period of the time that Laporte was a professor at the University of Michigan and does not reflect any other of the activities in which he was involved. The collection begins with a detailed biography and a bibliography of his works. The is followed by a series of correspondence that includes a folder of general correspondence, one concerning grants and one relating to his consulting work with NASA. The remaining series are highly technical in nature and consist almost entirely of equations and lecture notebooks.