104 NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 
Washington.—Main range of the Cascade Mountains, on both sides of 
international boundary. Saw about 500 head in 1889.—Lewis Lindsay 
Dyche. 
Mt. Chopaca. 1887.—G. O. Shields. 
Winthrop, Okanogan County. 1894.—Guy Waring. 
Oregon.—Wallowa County. 1895.—J. R. Fowle. 
Montana.—Fridley, Park County, and Magdalen, Madison County. 
1897.—_W.. A. Hague. 
Miles City, and Hell Creek, Dawson County. 1900.—James McNaney. 
St. Mary’s Lakes. 1889.—George Bird Grinnell. 
East of Flathead Lake, thirty miles; St. Mary’s Lakes. 1896.—R. H. 
Chapman. 
Ten miles from northeast corner of Yellowstone Park. 1899.—Henry 
Gannett. 
Divide between Madison and Gallatin rivers. 1896.—M. P. Dunham. 
Idaho.—‘ Common along Salmon River, Pohsimeroi Mountains, and 
Saw-Tooth Mountains; and said to be common in north Idaho.” 1891.— 
C. Hart Merriam. 
Henry’s Lake. 1806.—R. W. Rock. 
Salmon River, middle fork, sixty miles from main Salmon River. In 
1897 trappers reported 2,000 to 2,500 head.—W. W. Miner. 
Oregon.—Southeastern. 1887.—C. H. Townsend. 
North Dakota.—Medora. 1900.—Howard Eaton. 
Wyoming.—Yellowstone Park. 1898.—Ernest Seton-Thompson and 
Captain George S. Anderson. 
Shoshone Mountains, northern Fremont County. 1900—W. T. 
Hornaday. 
Head of Green River. 1900.—Carl Rungius. 
Teton Range; Big Horn Mountains. 1898.—Henry Gannett. 
Black Hills. 1895.—W. W. Granger. 
Marysvale. 1895.—Frank Petersen. 
Colorado Desert. 1895.—/ra Dodge. 
Dubois. 1895.—Nelson Yarnell. 
Ten Sleep. 1895.—James Fullerton. 
Ishawood. 1897.—N. E. Brown. 
Laramie (twenty-five miles west). 1891.—Captain S. A. Lawson. 
Colorado.—Mr. T. H. Johnson, Game Commissioner of the State of 
Colorado, reports, under date of February 5, 1901, that mountain sheep 
are found in the mountains of the following counties of Colorado, and 
all counties westward thereof: Larimer, Boulder, Gilpin, Clear Creek, Park, 
Fremont, Custer, Huerfano, and Las Animas. This area comprises prac- 
tically the whole of the mountainous western half of the State. Regarding 
the abundance of mountain sheep in Colorado, Mr. Johnson makes the 
following statement: 
