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Placer Gold Deposits of New Mexico
by Maureen G. Johnson
THE historic document for learning about the locations and mining of placer gold in The Land of Enchantment, this is the Official Geological Survey Bulletin (#1138), "a catalog of location, geology, and production with lists of annotated references pertaining to the placer districts."
Item # NM229
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New Mexico PLIC Maps & Books
Apparel: Pins, Patches, Bandanas
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Black Footed Ferret
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
The black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes) is the only ferret species endemic to North America. Thought to be extinct until 1981 when a small population was discovered in norhtern Wyoming, the ferrets are making a slow but precarious comeback through captive breeding and reintroductions to their historic range. Status: endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:FERRET
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Black Rhinoceros
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
The population of Africa's Black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis)declined from an estimated 65,000 animals in 1970 to about 2,300 twenty-three years later. Poaching, habitat destruction, and wars have all contributed to the decline. Status: endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:RHINO
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Calypso Orchid
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
Also known as fairy slipper or Venus'slipper, the calypso (Calypso bulbosa)is distributed widely throughout the circumpolar northern montane forests but habitat destruction has restricted its range. Status: threatened or endangered in several states. Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:ORCHID
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Desert Tortoise
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
The Desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii)is native to the Mojave and Sonoran deserts of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico. Habitat destruction and urbanization have reduced tortoise populations by as much as 90 percent since the 1980s. Status: threatened Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:TORTOISE
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Ivory-billed Woodpecker
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
Widely considered extinct in the United States (a small population is said to exist in Cuba), the Ivory-billed woodpecker (Campechilus principalis) is the second largest woodpecker in the world. Reported sightings of this bird in Arkansas in 2004 and 2005 have ywet to be confirmed. Status: Endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:WOODPECKER
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Japanese Crane
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
The Japanese crane (Grus japonensis)is the second rarest crane after the Whooping crane of North America. Its population is estimated to be less than 2,000 birds. Status: Endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:JAPANCRANE
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Mexican Wolf
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
Smallest of the grey wolf subspecies in North America, the Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) once ranged from central Mexico north to central Arizona and New Mexico. By the second half of the 20th centry government and private hunting and trapping pushed the Mexican wolf to the brink of extinction. With few wolves left in the wild, a captive breeding program was established with the ultimate goal of reintroducing the lobo to its former range. The program has been beset with problems and few of the reintroduced wolves remain in the wild. Status: Endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:WOLF
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Mojave Cactus
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
The Mojave Mound Cactus (Echinocereeus triglochiderus nar. mojavensis)with its showy flowers is not on the endangered species list but protecting its desert environment is nonetheless important. Status: abundant
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:MOJAVECACT
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Monarch Butterfly
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
The Monarch (Danaus plexippus) is famous in North America for its long migration to forest sanctuaries in the Mexican state of Michoacan. Unfortunately, illegal logging and grazing of these forests pressent an all too real danger to their wintering grounds. Status: not endangered or thretened
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:MONARCH
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Siberian Tiger
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
Largest cat in the world, the Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris altaica)ranged throughout northern China,the Korean Peninsula, norhteastern Mongolia and southeastern Siberia. Today, most of the population is restricted to a small part of Russia's Far East. Status: Endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:TIGER
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Star Cactus
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
Star cactus (Astrophytum asterias is a small, spineless cactus resembling a sand dollar, which is one of its common names. Over collecting and habitat destruction has reduced the range of this cactus to Star County in Texas and the state of Tamaulipas in Mexico. Status: Endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:STARCACTUS
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picture Endangered Species Pin: Whooping Crane
by Public Lands Interpretive Association
The whooping crane (Grus americana is the tallest bird in North America, measuring 59 inches in height. It was once on the brink of extinction: its numbers in the wild reduced to 18 birds. Today, more than 450 birds exist in the wild and in captivity. Status: Endangered Click here for more information about endangered species across the world
Public Lands Interpretive Association | Item # PIN:WHOOPER
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