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The Brain has selected interesting
relevant
sentences from the web. It automatically assigned them to some of our
fictitious experts based on their personalities.
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Brian Mengel, Civil Servant
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Notes: Last week I had the opportunity to visit the crew at the Necedah National Wildlife Refuge while taking care of some outreach duties on behalf of the Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership.
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Miguel Cortez, Small Business Owner
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Cranes Come to San Luis Valley T he annual Monte Vista Crane Festival will take place at the Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge on March 9 – 11.
In late February, the Cranes start arriving from their wintering grounds at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico.
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Pete Trengle, Bass Player
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You can view cranes, swans, snow monkeys, and other highlights in an on-line narrated slide show of this work at: Images from this coverage are available for licensing from the National Geographic Image Collection.
Ted Crane's National Contradance Database including this cool National Grid (most handy for touring bands)
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Bori Gonbutoren, Reindeer Herder
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Pay a visit to the world famous bird sanctuary , Keoladeo Ghana National Park, the nesting place of thousands of Egrets, Siberian cranes, migratory water Fowl and other species of birds.
Pay a visit to the world famous bird sanctuary, Keoladeo Ghana national Park, the nesting place for thousands of Egrets, Siberian cranes, migratory water fowl and other special of birds.
As autumn settles in on the Columbia River, sandhill cranes, dusky Canada geese and other migratory birds begin to arrive at Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge, drawn to the glittering string of wetlands where food and shelter are plentiful.
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Arthur Dawkins, Astro-physicist
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Wood Buffalo, Canada’s largest national park, contains exceptional natural phenomena and protects a habitat where rare and endangered species, such as bison and whooping cranes, still survive.
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Josh Hogan, Commander
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Notes: The still juvenile whooping cranes continue their daily routine on the isolated salt marsh of the Chassahowitzka National Wildlife Refuge under the watchful eyes of the International Crane Foundation monitoring team.
Whooping cranes migrate through Nebraska in late March and April on their way to Wood Buffalo National Park in Canada to nest, and from mid-October to late November returning to winter at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge along the Texas coast.
Two days after arriving in Crystal River the young Whooping cranes were led the final 5-miles out to a predator-proof enclosure on a remote island of the Chassahowitzka National Wildlife Refuge.
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