. Handbook of birds of the western United States, including the great plains, great basin, Pacific slope, and lower Rio Grande Valley . om Labrador to Alaska. It is inhabited bythe wolverine, woodland caribou, moose, great northern shrike, pinebullfinch, andwiiite-winged On Mt. Shasta its only treesare the black alpine hemlock and white-barked pine, its character-istic mammal is the cony {Ochotona), and its characteristic bird theClarke crow. It is also frequented by the sooty grouse, westerngoshawk, Williamson sapsucker, rufous hummingbird, Oregon jay,pine siskin, junco, Audubon a


. Handbook of birds of the western United States, including the great plains, great basin, Pacific slope, and lower Rio Grande Valley . om Labrador to Alaska. It is inhabited bythe wolverine, woodland caribou, moose, great northern shrike, pinebullfinch, andwiiite-winged On Mt. Shasta its only treesare the black alpine hemlock and white-barked pine, its character-istic mammal is the cony {Ochotona), and its characteristic bird theClarke crow. It is also frequented by the sooty grouse, westerngoshawk, Williamson sapsucker, rufous hummingbird, Oregon jay,pine siskin, junco, Audubon and hermit warblers, creeper, red-breasted nuthatch, kinglets, and solitaire.^ 1 Merriams Laws of Temperature Control of the Geographic Distribution of Ter-restrial Animals and Plants, National Geographic Magazine, vi. 229-238. - Merriam, C. Hart, Life Zones and Crop Zones of the United States, Bull. No. 10,Biological Survey ; Geographic Distribution of Animals and Plants in North America,YearbooJ; of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1894. 3 Merriam, C. Hart, North American Fauna, No. 10, Result of a Biological Survey -^^C^ Ta. 4s S//V/ Q I A O/y ■^4 ^ 4/^ ^vo _/ N G ^•r south! ^-A^O-TA NEBRASKA ^H


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