Blog Entry 4
![Image](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgsMeh8hOlgDtU7vKCDspkt-QnQwnOg_4-tULNDetaMmvHP5j1xXvGpiXon9wYuwwKVsD46QHXJeuZwGQoQuAAkO67GmUpoBjX8cJI7a_BQ9g0OaPAbm8DRPeRYXFO4Bt5Gr7RVQoFHzOmd/s320/20201103_152440.jpg)
Date and time of visit: 11/03/2020 3:30pm Weather Conditions: 87° F, Cold breeze, and Slightly windy Site Description: Most of the site has stayed the same since the last visit. Based on the results so far there might not be that much of a change to some of these plants. I found more debris in the site, similar to what I found last time, just less of it. The debris I did find was pretty different from what I’d normally see. One of the drawings included was this brown oddly shaped leaf that was not from any tree I could see in the site or anywhere near it, it must have traveled quite a distance to end up here. Another interesting piece of debris that I found was this spiky seed from what I believe to be a sweetgum tree, which is also not located on-site or anywhere near it but is located in California. I believe the spiky portion of the seed, the outside layer, is to keep predators from eating it, which to me is an interesting idea. This tree has a physical defense for its seeds in...