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U of I hires Dr Jacki Thompson Rand as Associate Vice Chancellor for Native Affairs : SPlog : Smile Politely
smilepolitely.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from smilepolitely.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Whitmer - July 2021: Lakes Appreciation Month
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After meeting the grim fate of overhunting in the 20th century, is it time the stunningly ferocious jaguar had another shot at living in the US? This team of researchers believes so.
Writing in the journal Conservation Science and Practice, researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society and Defenders of Wildlife put forward their case for reintroducing jaguars to the mountainous southwestern stretches of the US.
Jaguars are the largest cat species in the Americas, armed with lean muscles and a powerful bite, also known for their distinctive spotty tan-colored fur. The species (
Panthera onca) roamed the central mountain ranges of Arizona and New Mexico as late as the 1960s until they were hunted to local extinction. Today, odd individuals can very occasionally be spotted living in the southern corners of the US, but the species is generally limited to portions of South America and Central America. Even here, it’s estimated they have lost over 50 percent of its historic
WASHINGTON â It is that time of year again when a slew of domestic and international auction houses are selling sensitive Native American cultural heritage items.
According to the Association of American Indian Affairs, it has so far in this year investigated 66 domestic and foreign auctions that are selling at least 3,000 items that were likely stolen burial objects or are cultural and sacred patrimony owned by one of the 574 federally recognized Native nations or 300 other tribal nations and groups in the United States.Â
AAIA officials said there is a long history of theft and looting of Native American human remains, burial objects and other sensitive sacred and cultural patrimony. This theft and looting has created a commercial enterprise in the sale of those items, now re-labeled as Native American âart,â âartifactsâ and âantiquities,â AAAI officials said.Â
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