Nancy Guttmann was born in New York City on August 12, 1930. In December 1951 she married Glen A. Slack. At Cornell University she graduated in June 1952 with B.Sc. in agriculture and in 1954 with M.Sc. Her master's thesis is entitled
Variation of the Small Cranberries in Eastern North America. In the late 1950s and the decade of the 1960s she raised three children and helped her husband's career. In 1971 she received her Ph.D. in ecology from the
University at Albany, SUNY. Her Ph.D. thesis, entitled
Species diversity and community structure in bryophytes, won the Paul C. Lemon Award. After receiving her Ph.D. she became an assistant professor of biology at
Russell Sage College and retired there in 2002 as professor emerita. After formal retirement from Russell Sage College, she engaged in “writing books and magazine articles, teaching ecology, natural history, and botany, birding, singing in an oratorio society, reading, and doing scientific travel with her husband.” She received the 2014 Guy Waterman Alpine Steward Award for her lifetime achievement in alpine ecology and conservation work for mountain wilderness in the American Northeast. Her husband, a physicist and inventor, died in 2019, leaving his widow, three children, and six grandchildren. ==References==