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Old 06-20-2006, 02:01 PM
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petey petey is offline
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Join Date: May 2002
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Fair Enough... All the wolfs were gray, but not the same evolved gray that came from Canada. Here's a little timeline prior to the "re-introduction" for those who favor that term. Maybe species was the wrong term to use

20,000 B.C. - Cave drawings of wolves are made in southern Europe.

5,000 B.C. - Early agricultural settlements in southwest Asia come into conflict with wolves.

2,300 B.C. - First reference to a wolf in Western literature occurs in the Epic of Gilgamesh.

800 B.C. - Numerous references to wolves are made in Homer's epic poem The Iliad.

500 B.C. - Aristotle describes wolves in his writings.

A.D. 30 - Jesus Christ uses wolf parables to illustrate moral principles.

70 - Pliny the Elder provides a detailed pseudoscientific account fo wolves in his book, Natural History.

70 - Plutarch describes the legend of Romulus and Remus, founders of Rome who were raised by wolves, in his Putative Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans.

600 - During the European Middle Ages, legends of werewolves and beliefs that wolves are assoicated with devils abound.

750 - Beowolf, the oldest of the major narrative poems in English, is composed; the protagonist, named for wolf, slays a monster named Grendel.

1600 - William Shakespeare employs dozens of wolf references in his plays.

1630 - First wolf bounty law passed by the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

1632 - First wolf bounty law passed by the Virginia Bay Colony.

1697 - New Jersey offers a wolf bounty.

1750 - Wolves become extinct in the Scottish Highlands at the hands of Lochiel, a clan chieftain, because they "preyed on the red deer of the Grampians." Wolves are similiarly persecuted in western Europe, but do not become extinct in France, Italy, or Spain as they do in other countries.

1758 - Linnaeus recognizes the wolf as a circumpolar species and gives the species the Latin name Canis lupus linnaeus.

1790 - Russian and German naturalists report wolves in Alaska.

1793 - Wolf bounty is offered in Ontario.

1805 - Explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark encounter wolves in the Far West.

1808 - Zebulon Pike reports wolves in what is today Colorado.

1819 - The government expedition of Major Stephen Long encounters wolves in large numbers in Colorado.

1823 - As with earlier government expeditions, trapper/explorer James Ohio Pattie documents wolves living in close association with extensive prey populations.

1832 - Artist George Catlin paints Buffalo Hunt Under the Wolfskin Mask, depicting two Pawnee warriors hunting buffalo disguised as wolves, and White Wolves Attacking a Buffalo Bull, which portrays two dozen wolves killing an old bull buffalo. These paintings are later exhibited in New York, London, and Paris.

1835 - America's first internationally known writer, Washington Irving, describes wolves in what is today Oklahoma in his travel narrative A Tour on the Prairies; he is the first professional writer to do so.

1840s - Tens of thousands of settlers head west on the Oregon Trail and the Santa Fe Trail. Increasing settlements come into conflict with wolves and their prey species as the entire Great Plains ecosystem begins to be destroyed.

1860s - Western railroad expansion brings buffalo market hunters to the Far West, decimating the great buffalo herds.

1870s - First cattle drives introduce livestock into previously remote mountain habitat for wolves; sheep herds will come later, leading to even more destruction of wolves and other predators.

1872 - Yellowstone National Park is established in northwestern Wyoming.

1880s - Theodore Roosevelt reports wolves are becoming scarce in the Dakotas.

1884 - U.S. Biological Survey is formed ( a precursor to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service).

1894 - Nature writer Ernest Thompson Seton kills the Currumpaw wolf of New Mexico and his mate, Blanca. Seton will eventually write a book, Lobo, King of the Currumpaw, about this experience.

1897 - Frederic Remington paints Moonlight Wolf, depicting a solitary Great Plains wolf (Canis lupus nubilus), a subspecies that would become extinct in a few years.

1899 - Wolf bounty is offered in Alberta.

1909 - Aldo Leopold kills a mother wolf and pups in the Apache National Forest of Arizona. This incident will later inspire his seminal essay "Thinking Like a Mountain" written in 1944 and published posthumously in 1949.

1909 - Wolf bounty is offered in British Columbia.

1914 - Congress designates U.S. Biological Survey as chief predator control agency.

1915 - First professional trappers and hunters hired by U.S. Biological Survey; their heyday will run through 1942 as wolfers operate in Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, the Dakotas, Arizona, and New Mexico.

1915 - Wolf bounty offered in Alaska.

1916 - National Park Service Act is signed into law, mandating protection of wildlife and maintenance of recreational opportunities.

1916 - The American Far West is divided into control districts by U.S. Biological Survey, thus paving the way for the systematic extermination of all predators through use of poisoned baits (strychnine; Compound 1080 after 1944) and steel leg-hold traps; eventually airplanes and helicopters will be used.

1925 - Last wolf in South Dakota ("Old Three Toes") is killed.

1926 - Since 1914 about 120 wolves have been killed in Yellowstone National Park; after 1926 there are no viable reports of wolves or wolf activity in northwestern Wyoming for a number of decades.

1927 - Last wolf in eastern Montana is killed.

1929 - German novelist Herman Hesse publishes Steppenwolf, a novel that links the impulsive, atavistic nature of man with the same quality of the wolf of the eastern European/western Asian steppes.

1929 - Ernest Thompson Seton publishes Lives of the Great Animals, a seminal work of natual history.

1933 - Wolf bounty law is repealed in Montana.

1934 - Wildlife biologist Adolph Murie begins his study of the coyote in Yellowstone National Park and confirms the wolf in now extirpated. Murie also establishes that the coyote poses no threat to the major game species, most notably elk, that migrate out of the park into national forests, where they can be hunted.

1939 - Adolph Murie begins a two-year study of the relationship between the subartic wolf (Canis lupus pambasileus) and the Dall sheep (Ovis ovis dalli); Murie concludes that the wolf has a "salutary effect" on the prey species, a finding that stirs much controversy in the National Park Service.

1943 - Last wolf in Colorado is killed in Upper Conejos River near Platoro Reservoir.

1944 - Stanley Young's The Wolves of North America (a mixture of fact and folklore) is published. Adolph Murie's The Wolves of Mount McKinley is published; it is the first scientific treatise on the species. Murie is the first professional photographer to extensively document the wolf in the wild.

1948 - Special Act of Congress permits wolf trapping in Mount McKinley National Park over the objections of Adolph Murie and other biologists. Murie later is forced to play a role in this eradication measure, which results in the artificially elevated numbers of caribou seen in the park in the 1960s and 1970s (before the caribou population collapse).

1950s - Aerial hunting of wolves in Alaska and Canada begins in ernest.

1960s - Persistent unconfirmed wolf sightings in Yellowstone National Park will continue until the present time. Radio-collared Alaskan wolves have covered up to 400 miles in one year, so the possibility that the Yellowstone wolves came from Canada cannot be ruled out (nor can the covert release of wolves by unknown parties).

1962 - L. David Mech completes his doctoral dissertation on the wolves of Isle Royale National Park. (This wolf population will later be decimated by canine distemper in the late 1980s.)

1963 - Canadian writer Farley Mowat publishes Never Cry Wolf; a highly successful film will later (1983) dramatize Mowat's adventures in the Canadian Artic and for the first time portray wolves positively to the public in cinema. Leopold report recommends predator restoration.

1964 - Wilderness Act is signed into law; it protects former wolf habitat for furture restoration projects (though not by design).

1970 - Mexican wolf killed Peloncillo Mountains of New Mexico.

1970 - L. David Mech publishes The Wolf; Ecology and Behavior of an Endangered Species.

1970s - U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service captures Mexican wolves in Mexico for captive breeding.

1970s - U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service captures red wolves in Texas and Louisiana for captive breeding.

1970s - U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service extensively studies the Minnesota wolf populations.

1971 - Quebec ends wolf bounty.

1972 - Ontario ends wolf bounty.

1973 - Edangered Species Act is passed into law. The 1982 amendments will put enforcement strength into the act and provide further clarification on restoration issues.

1974 - Yellowstone wolf search involves 1,800 hours of airplane overflights and reveals only one "wolf-like canid."

1976 - Encouraged by National Park Service officials, Colorado State University graduate student Herb Conley writes a thesis on the restoration of wolves to Rocky Mountain National Park, where the burgeoning elk populations are destroying habitat, as in Yellowstone.

1976 - Two red wolves are released on Bulls Island off the South Carolina coast.

1978 - Barry Lopez publishes Of Wolves and Men.

1979 - Mexican Wolf Recovery Team is appointed; recovery plans for the red wolf and the northern Rocky Mountain gray wolf are also institutionalized at this time. Durward Allen publishes The Wolves of Minong: Their Vital Role in a Wild Community.

1980 - Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA) is signed into law. It doubles the National Park system and triples national wilderness acreage in Alaska.
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Last edited by petey; 06-20-2006 at 02:13 PM.
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