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We can make this file beautiful and searchable if this error is corrected: It looks like row 3 should actually have 1 column, instead of 6 in line 2.
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organisms-small.csv
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dcterms_identifier|dwc_establishmentMeans|dcterms_modified|dwc_organismRemarks|dwc_collectionCode|dwc_catalogNumber|dwc_georeferenceRemarks|dwc_decimalLatitude|dwc_decimalLongitude|geo_alt|dwc_organismName|dwc_organismScope|cameo|notes|suppress
http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbilt/10-217|managed|2015-07-31T15:56:37-05:00||vanderbilt|4-104|Location of individual determined from GIS database.|36.14443|-86.80518|||multicellular organism|http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/baskauf/12663||
http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbilt/6-188|managed|2015-07-31T15:56:37-05:00|Mentioned in 1994 Trees of Vanderbilt book p.28.|vanderbilt|2-1030|Location of individual determined from GIS database.|36.14605|-86.80051|||multicellular organism|http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/baskauf/12274|<div>This tree is growing next to the central library in the corner formed by the library and the retaining wall whose steps lead up to the Divinity School. It is part of a four-way tie for <a href='http://vanderbilt.edu/trees/big'>largest tree</a> in the Vanderbilt arboretum. It is also in a three-way tie for tallest tree on campus at a height of 32 meters (104 ft.).<br/><br/>Despite the fact that that its lowest branches are high above the ground, this tree provides an excellent opportunity to examine the <a href='baskauf/11238.htm'>leaves</a> (and in the fall, <a href='baskauf/15633.htm'>acorns</a>) of willow oak. If you take the stairs to the top of the retaining wall, you can examine branches from the tree that overhang the wall. The small, narrow leaves look more like a willow than an oak, but the <a href='kirchoff/em2636.htm'>clustered buds</a> at the end of the twig tell you that it actually is from the <em>Quercus</em> (oak) genus.<br/><br/></div>|
http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbilt/6-189|managed|2015-07-31T15:56:37-05:00||vanderbilt|2-950|Location of individual determined from GIS database.|36.14607|-86.80042|||multicellular organism|http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/baskauf/91059|<div>This small tree is located near the bottom of the stairs in the retaining wall by the chapel. It is between the sidewalk to 21st Ave.S. and the Central Library.<br/><br/>American hornbeam has <a href='../baskauf/29811.htm'>leaves</a> similar to <a href='../baskauf/29784.htm'>hop hornbeam leaves</a>.  The <a href='../baskauf/15728.htm'>bark</a> of American hornbeam is smooth like <a href='../baskauf/10432.htm'>beech bark</a> (giving it one of its common names: "blue beech"), but looks like it has rippling muscles beneath it (giving it another of its common names: "muscle-tree").  This is quite different from the shreddy <a href='../baskauf/12021.htm'>bark of hop hornbeam</a>.  American hornbeam <a href='../kirchoff/b5064.htm'>fruits</a> hang in a small cluster which has a more leafy look than the <a href='../baskauf/16278.htm'>hop hornbeam fruits</a>.<br/><br/>American hornbeam is common in middle Tennessee forests.<br/><br/></div>|
http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/ind-baskauf/10777|native|2015-07-31T15:56:37-05:00||||Location determined from Google maps.|36.02117|-86.78855|||multicellular organism|||