RANGE OF THE WHITE MOUNTAIN GOAT, AS IT IS IN 1906, 

 EXCEPTING THE TETON MOUNTAINS 



UNITED STATES 



Wyoming: Teton Mountains, 1892 W. H. Wright 



Montana: Big Hole Country, 1899 Samuel C. Pirie 



Granite Country; Mission Range, Flathead 



Reservation W. H. Wright 



St. Mary's Lakes region, 1902 .... A. P. Proctor 



Idaho: Bitter Root Mountains W. H. Wright 



Washington: Silverton, Cascade Mountains, 1892 . . A. P. Proctor 

 Conconally, 1884; Slocan Mountains and 



LakeChelan W.H.Wright 



BRITISH COLUMBIA 



Fernie: 1904 . H. W. Herchmer 



Elk River: 1905 John M. Phillips 



Bull River: 1905 B. T. Van Nostrand 



Spillamachene River: Golden, I94 Madison Grant 



Clinton: 1905 F. Soues 



Quesnel Forks: 1905 W. Stephenson 



Bakerville (north-east): 1905 James McKern 



Slocan Lake, east, 1888; Similkameen River, 1888; Coqui- 

 halla River, 1 888; Harrison Lake; Pitt Lake, 

 north; Princess Louise Inlet; Bridge River; 

 Wauchope (Brewer Creek); Yellowhead 

 Pass; Canoe River, 1885; Head of Fraser 

 River; Peace River, longitude 125, latitude 

 56; Knight Inlet, latitude 51; Bute Inlet; 

 Dean Channel; Gardiner Canal; Kitimat 

 Arm; Skeena River (from Port Essington 

 200 miles up); Nass River; Stickine; Iscoot; 

 McDame Creek (Dease River); Scheslay 

 River; Francis Laike. 



"The Goat is the most widely distributed 

 animal in British Columbia, and except the 

 black bear is the only animal found through- 

 out the length and breadth of the province. 

 Apparently it is equally at home in the dry 

 belt, and the wet coast belt lying east and 

 west of the Cascade Mountains." Letter 

 and map, dated March 12, 1906. 



Big-Horn Hills: Head of Athabasca River, 1902 . . G. O. Shields 

 (Eastern slope of Rockies.) 

 1 06 



Warburton Pike 



