40 University of Michigan 



milk in the mammae. At the camp on Lindsley Lake June 27 

 one was seen to eat some wood aslies ; and June 30 one was 

 seen to feed on the blades of quack grass {Agropyron repcns), 

 which was identified by E. A. Bessey. 



Odocoileus virginianus borcalis. Northern White-tailed Deer. 



Forest — shore, i. Black spruce — tamarack bog, 



Mud-flat, signs. signs. 



Tall-sedge, i. Hemlock forest, signs. 



Grassy-meadow, i. Wet hardwood forest, 10. 



Alder-thicket, signs. Dry. hardwood forest, 7. 



Black ash swamp, signs. Shrub stage, 8. 



Arbor-vitae swamp, signs. Paper birch — aspen stage, i. 



Deer are abundant in the Cisco Lake Region ; they are less 

 common near Lake Gogebic; and only a few were seen near 

 Little Girl's Point. Most of those seen were in the hardwood 

 forest and in the brushy clearings, but trails and signs were 

 common in many habitats. 



Wolves were reported to prey extensively on deer in the 

 region, and wolf dung examined August 7 near Little Girl's 

 Point contained much deer hair and some deer bones. 

 Alces americanns. Moose. 



J. E. Marshall reports that a moose was seen near Gogebic 

 Lake in the winter of 1885, and an individual, perhaps the 

 same one, was killed on Flambeau Reservation that year. 



