Article

Elizabeth L. Horn

A photo of Elizabeth Horn wearing a white shirt and pink jacket, smiling for the camera in front of green trees.
Elizabeth Horn

Photo courtesy of Elizabeth Horn.

Article Written By Charlotte Hansen Terry

For nearly six decades Elizabeth L. Horn, a plant ecologist, has been connected to Crater Lake National Park. She began what she called her “long love affair with this fascinating landscape” during the 1960s.1 Her research on plant succession on the Pumice Desert along the Park’s North Entrance Road has continued for decades, informing how the park has preserved and interpreted this area.2

Elizabeth Laura Mueller was born in 1942 in Gary, Indiana, to Melvin W. Mueller and Adah H. Letz.3 She attended Crown Point High School, where she was a member of both the National Honor Society and Future Teachers of America.4 Horn earned her BA in biology from Valaparaiso University in Indiana, and then attended Purdue University for her graduate work in plant ecology. During 1964 and 1965 she worked as a seasonal ranger naturalist at Crater Lake National Park. It was during her time in graduate school that she began her ecological study of the Pumice Desert.5 The Pumice Desert is a five-square-mile dry meadow on the north side of the park surrounded by lodgepole pines. Its porous volcanic deposits limit plant succession, creating a harsh environment with few plant species. Richard Brown, the Biologist at Crater Lake, initially encouraged her to pursue the project.6 Horn performed a vegetation, climatic, and soil analysis of the area, in which lodgepole pines had only recently appeared. In her analyses, she found only fourteen species in the studied plots that possessed adaptations to survive in this particular soil, species that covered only 5 percent of the surface.7 She graduated from Purdue University in 1966, with a Master’s thesis based on her work at Crater Lake.8 That same year she began a 30-year career with the US Forest Service.9 She met Kirk Malcom Horn, a biologist who specialized in wildlife, at Crater Lake where he worked during the summers.10 They married in 1968 and had one daughter.11

Beth and Kirk often collaborated on their research. Kirk taught biology at a local high school and at Mount Hood Community College and Beth was an instructor at Central Oregon Community College. They then had memorable careers with the U.S. Forest Service, first in Oregon and then in Washington D.C. and Montana. Beth Horn continued to monitor the plants in the Pumice Desert and began larger studies of Northwestern native plants. She published several popular wildflower guides for the Cascade and Sierra Nevada mountains, as well as the Oregon coast.12 She hiked extensively in the region, where she “chased after various plants” in order to record them for her books.13 Many of her wildflower guides went into multiple editions. Beth Horn was later a botany instructor at Central Oregon Community College.14 The Horns both retired from the Forest Service in 1999 and moved to West Yellowstone, where they continued to explore the outdoors together until Kirk’s death in 2019.15

Horn returned to the Pumice Desert to monitor the vegetation changes even after her retirement, resurveying the same plots in 1977, 1995, 2000, and 2005.16 Her research showed that the number of trees nearly tripled during the forty-year period, indicating a slow plant succession. She authored an unpublished document titled “A Sliver in Time: Fifty Years on the Pumice Desert, Crater Lake National Park” for Crater Lake NP; it depicts paired photos from 1965 and 2015 to show change over time.17 Horn and her husband have participated in nature groups during their retirement in West Yellowstone, including the West Yellowstone Birding Trail Committee and the Audubon Christmas Bird Count. Horn has also taught courses on wildflowers and native shrubs for people to plant in their gardens.18 Horn’s love of plants and decades of work at Pumice Desert have expanded the understanding of the ecology of Crater Lake, and her publications continue to inform those who love exploring the Pacific Northwest.


1 - Elizabeth Horn, “The Pumice Desert, Crater Lake National Park,” Kalmiopsis 9 (2002), 11.

2 - For more on the Pumice Desert, see https://www.nps.gov/crla/learn/nature/pumice-desert.htm.

3 - Elizabeth Laura Mueller and Kirk Malcom Horn Marriage Certificate, Aug 20, 1968, Ancestry.com. Oregon, State Marriages, 1906-1966 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2018.

4 - Crown Point High School, 1960 Yearbook, “U.S., School Yearbooks, 1880–2012,” Ancestry.com. U.S., School Yearbooks, 1900-1999 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.

5 - Horn, “The Pumice Desert,” 11, 15.

6 - Elizabeth L. Horn, “Forty Years of Vegetation Changes on the Pumice Desert, Crater Lake National Park, Oregon,” Northwest Science 83 no. 3 (2009): 209; Elizabeth L. Horn, “The Botanists at Crater Lake National Park,” Kalmiopsis 12 (2005): 33.

7 - Elizabeth Mueller Horn, “Ecology of the Pumice Desert, Crater Lake National Park,” Northwest Science 42 (1968): 141–49.

8 - Elizabeth Laura Mueller, “Introduction to the Ecology of the Pumice Desert,” Crater Lake National Park, Oregon” (unpublished M.S. thesis, Purdue University, 1966).

9 - “Briefly: Garden Club plans August events,” Bozeman Daily Chronicle, Aug. 16, 2013, accessed Sep 20, 2020, https://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/news/briefly-garden-club-plans-august-events/article_56155b6d-67ab-586b-a5e0-d751c200bd3b.html.

10 - “Kirk Malcom Horn, 1939–2019,” Bozeman Daily Chronicle, March 13, 2019, accessed Sep 20, 2020, https://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/obituaries/horn-kirk-malcolm/article_23375ec9-f3d2-548b-a779-2b4f38a3ff07.html.

11 - Elizabeth Laura Mueller and Kirk Malcom Horn Marriage Certificate, Aug 20, 1968, Ancestry.com.

12 - Her wildflower books include: Wildflowers 1: The Cascades (Beaverton, Oregon: Touchstone Press, 1972); Coastal Wildflowers of the Pacific Northwest (Mountain Press, 1993); Sierra Nevada Wildflowers (Missoula, Montana: Mountain Press, 1998) originally published in 1976 as The Sierra Nevada (Beaverton, Oregon: Touchstone Press, 1976); Oregon’s Best Wildflower Hikes, Southwest Region (Westcliffe, 2006).

13 - Horn, Wildflowers 1: The Cascades, 16.

14 - “Briefly: Garden Club plans August events,” Bozeman Daily Chronicle.

15 - Horn, “The Pumice Desert, Crater Lake National Park,” 15; “Kirk Malcom Horn,” Bozeman Daily Chronicle.

16 - Horn, “The Botanists at Crater Lake National Park,” 33, 36.

17 - Horn, “The Pumice Desert, Crater Lake National Park,” 11–15; Horn, “Forty Years of Vegetation Changes on the Pumice Desert,” 200–210.

18 - David Warner, “Birds and how to find them,” Bozeman Daily Chronicle, Sep 14 2006, accessed Sep 20, 2020, https://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/news/birds-and-how-to-find-them/article_fd499926-7885-54e2-8ed9-2bfc480261d5.html; Abbie Tumbleson, “Bird counters find 40 species in West Yellowstone,” Dec 24 2010, accessed Sept 20, 2020, https://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/news/bird-counters-find-40-species-in-west-yellowstone/article_f4ff2448-efa9-535f-8440-4c488296eb95.html; “Briefly: Garden Club plans August events,” Bozeman Daily Chronicle.

Acknowledgements:

This project was made possible in part by a grant from the National Park Foundation.

This project was conducted in Partnership with the University of California Davis History Department through the Californian Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit, CA# P20AC00946

Part of a series of articles titled Women's History in the Pacific West - Columbia-Pacific Northwest Collection.

Crater Lake National Park

Last updated: February 22, 2022