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- Karen Dykes
- Date Uploaded
- 2021-12-08
- Date Modified
- 2021-12-08
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- passed on August 08, 2024 at 14:06
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Height: 855Width: 657File Format: tiff (Tagged Image File Format)File Size: 1117122Filename: 8292_img_134.tiffLast Modified: 2024-08-09T03:48:04.475ZOriginal Checksum: aae73445628e80c79de465071365cae7Mime Type: image/tiff
- contemporaneously with the Irish Fallow - obviously the area would produce large antlers. One can infer that either the stock was genetically different from the Scots red deer which, at the same period had taller antlers with much smaller numbers of points. There have been so many introductions of Scottish Red deer into Ireland that this ancient characteristic has been lost. The Scottish strain has the potential for many points on large heads witness the results of transplantation to New Zealand. He also tells me that the white color of the British white cattle is completely dominant even to the F2 back cross to [male symbol] black Angus sire. Jan 29, 1953. Lectured to the University of Aberdeen Zoology faculty + grad students today on The origin of the Vertebrate Fauna of Northwestern America. About 30 present Visited the Rowett Institute where I had brief chats with W Thompson [William Thomson?], J. [John] A. Crichton + A.T. Phillipson then lunched with the latter + Dr D.P. [Sir David Paton] Cuthbertson. [A.T.] Phillipson is in charge of the discussion of ruminant physiology + working primarily in the field of ruminant digestion. He suggests that a study of the urea content of deer
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