General guide to the exhibition halls of the American Museum of Natural History . Id • = a. a S| p 1 z § z | 0 2 1 ~O -z s o - X ~ 0- x 55. o QJO HiCO nce abundant, they have become much reduced in numbers, though an effort is now being made to preserve them. This animal is not a goat as the name implies, but an antelope. It Rocky i* f()und from Idaho to Montana northward through British Mountain Columbia to the mouth of Copper River, inhabiting steep mountain ranges and inaccessible peaks. Several forms or subspecies are now recognized. The Beaver, formerly the most important, from a commerci
General guide to the exhibition halls of the American Museum of Natural History . Id • = a. a S| p 1 z § z | 0 2 1 ~O -z s o - X ~ 0- x 55. o QJO HiCO nce abundant, they have become much reduced in numbers, though an effort is now being made to preserve them. This animal is not a goat as the name implies, but an antelope. It Rocky i* f()und from Idaho to Montana northward through British Mountain Columbia to the mouth of Copper River, inhabiting steep mountain ranges and inaccessible peaks. Several forms or subspecies are now recognized. The Beaver, formerly the most important, from a commercialstandpoint, of North American mammals, and one intimately connected„ with the early history and exploration of the continent, is Beaver , , , represented actively at work. The cats, wolves and foxes, and the host of small creatures likesquirrels, rats and mice, are represented by numerous characteristicCats, Wolves examples. Here
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade191, booksubjectnaturalhistorymuseums