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Showing 204 results for coyote ...
Bond Cabin
- Type: Place
Built in 1918 and known as the "Big House," it served as a seasonal home for the Bond family and functioned as the official ranch headquarters. The living room fireplace and wood-burning stove heated the building, and the cooking was done mostly outdoors. An outhouse was used until the Dunigan family remodeled in the 1980s.
Amache Museum
- Type: Person
Carrie Chapman Catt (1859 -1947) began her career as a national women’s rights activist when she addressed the National American Woman Suffrage Association in 1890 at their national convention in Washington DC. She quickly became a dedicated writer, lecturer, and recruiter for the suffrage movement. She also worked for peace and was a co-founder of the League of Women Voters.
Podcast 099: Finding and Preserving LGBTQ Southern History with the Invisible Histories Project
The South Overlook Trail
Aliante Parkway Kiosk
- Type: Place
This interpretive kiosk is located at N. Aliante Pkwy & W. Moonlight Falls Ave. The kiosk describes the history of scientific research at Tule Springs, safety tips, park regulations, and a map of the monument. This area features relatively flat terrain, creosote desert scrub habitat, and views of the Las Vegas and Sheep ranges.
- Type: Article
When have you needed courage? In this learning activity for fifth grade, students explore questions about when and how to take a stand in their everyday lives. Using photographs of Lucy Burns, co-founder of the National Woman's Party and the woman who spent more time in prison than any other American suffragist, students engage with questions about the courage needed to speak out.
- Type: Article
The National Park Service Youth and Young Adult Programs Division co-hosted the virtual event “Then/Now/Tomorrow: Empowering Our Future Conservation and Climate Stewards” on April 24, 2024, for National Park Week, alongside The Corps Network, the National Park Foundation, and AmeriCorps. A panel of six current and former corps members shared their experiences working and serving on public lands.
Surprises in Scat: Studying the Eastern Coyote population within Cape Cod National Seashore
Lines
San Antonio Creek
- Type: Place
Below the north rim of the volcanic caldera and about 12 miles from the Entrance Station, San Antonio Creek meanders through the lush mountain meadows of Valle San Antonio and is home to thousands of non-native brown trout. Elk, bear, coyote, and mountain bluebirds are often spotted along the banks of the creek.
"Cerro La Jara" by Melissa Fu
- Type: Article
On my first walk around Cerro La Jara, when rounding the north side of the dome, I see two coyotes hunting and loping along. Their tawny browns, blacks and grays blend in with the grasses. I hold my phone camera up, recording a video while tracking them with my bare eyes. Transfixed, I watch until they dissolve into the landscape. When I look at the video later, they aren’t there. Of course they aren’t.
- Type: Article
OCTOBER 2024 – In the North Cascades, hoary marmots are in danger. Between 2007 and 2016, observed abundance fell by a whopping 74%. Past research linked this decline with chronically dry conditions and low snowpack, combined with acute cold. A new study examined whether climate change is compounding the threat by opening the door to predators like coyotes that were previously deterred by snowpack.
Lamar Valley - Wildlife Watching
Lamar Valley - Predators and Prey
Hellroaring Trailhead (2K8)
- Type: Place
Nestled a 1/4-mile (0.4-km) off the Grand Loop Road, this trailhead provides access to the following trails:- Buffalo Plateau Trail- Coyote Creek Trail- Garnet Hill Loop Trail- Hellroaring Creek TrailThere is a decent amount of parking at the trailhead. Buffalo Plateau Trail A strenuous, 18.8-mile (30.2-km) there-and-back trail that forks off from the Hellroaring Creek Trail and provides panoramic views of the Yellowstone River and Hellroaring Creek valleys. Coyote Creek Trai
Charles and Mathilda Nelson House
- Type: Place
The Nelson-Reed property in Porter County, Indiana, is a historical site rooted in the Swedish immigrant farming community and Indiana Dunes preservation. Established by Swedish immigrants Charles and Mathilda Nelson, the farm became a hub of local history, with their son Bill co-founding the Duneland Historical Society. In 1952, Chicago architect Earl Reed Jr. purchased the property, championing conservation efforts, including the creation of Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore
Wayside: A Reclaimed Wilderness
Letter from Charles Jones & Co. to Andrew Robeson and William Frampton – September 28, 1685
- Type: Article
This was a 1685 letter written from Charles Jones Jr. and his associates in Bristol, England to Andrew Robeson and William Frampton in Philadelphia. In this letter Robeson and Frampton were given the power of attorney to collect debts for Charles Jones Jr. & Company and the captain of the Isabella, Thomas Taylor.