SHEEP— BOTH WHITE AND DARK 



Below is a list of the mountain sheep given by 

 Miller, together with the type locality of each: 



Ovis canadensis canadensis: "Bighorn"; mountains on Bow 

 River, near Calgary, Alberta. 



*Ovis canadensis auduboni: Upper Missouri, S. D. (I think this 



was the original type locality of canadensis^ but the names 



have been changed and a new type locality given to the 



"bighorn." 



*Ovis canadensis californiana: Near Mt. Adams, Yakima 



County, Wash. 

 *Ovis canadensis cremnobates: Matomi, San Pedro Martir Moun- 

 tain, Lower California. 

 *Ovis canadensis gaillardi: Between Tinajas Altas and Mexican 



boundary line, Yuma County, Arizona. 

 *Ovis canadensis Sierrae: Mt. Baxter, Inyo County, California. 

 *Ovis canadensis texiana: "Texas mountain sheep"; Guadalupe 

 Mountains, El Paso County, Tex. 



Ovis covoani: Cowan's mountain sheep. Near Mt. Logan, 

 British Columbia. 



Ovis dalli dalli: Dall's mountain sheep. West of Ft. Reliance, 

 Alaska. 



Ovis dalli kenaiensis: Kenai mountain sheep. Kenai Peninsula, 

 Alaska. 



Ovis fannini: Fannin's mountain sheep. No longer recognized 

 as a sub-species. 



Ovis mexicana: Mexican mountain sheep. Lake Santa Maria, 

 Chihuahua, Mexico. 



Ovis nelsoni: Nelson's sheep. Grapevine Mountains, Cali- 

 fornia-Nevada boundary. 



Ovis stonei: Stone's mountain sheep. Stikine River, B. C. 



While the nervous waters were battering down 

 and wearing away the bridge that then con- 

 nected Alaska and Kamchatka, Old Man Big- 

 horn sallied eastward, he and his kin, into the 



•No common name. 



85 



