Correspondence between British Museum (Natural History) and Geoffrey Marr Vevers regarding a report of a Black-Headed Gull to the Bird-Ringing Committee at the British Museum of Natural History, articles on Okapi by Reginald Innes Pocock, an account of the baby Dendrohyrax by Cecil Stanley Webb , Antarctic Seals, skins and skulls of small carnivores, the fox which the Zoological Society of London received from Tel Aviv Gardens, an exhibition of Tree Hyraxes, exhibits for Major Cottam, donations of specimens to the British Museum (Natural History), mongoose skins, Tangier Smith's location in Sze Chuan to locate the original Pandas, the release of Kodiak Bears at Whipsnade Zoo, publications by Doubleday on the Giant Panda, rings for a Golden Eagle from the Bird-Ringing Committee, the species of Monkey from Northern Nigeria, a Leopard from the Himalayas, measurements of the Kodiak Bears called Kam and Schatka at Whipsnade, and a donation of Hedgehogs to the USA
Golden eagles
6 Archival description results for Golden eagles
6 results directly related
Exclude narrower terms
SUP/5/1/2/36
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File
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1946
Part of Superintendents
PAM/1/4/4
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File
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1965-1966
Part of Press and Marketing
SUP/5/1/2/173
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File
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1946
Part of Superintendents
Correspondence between the Parc Zoologique de Cleres and Geoffrey Marr Vevers regarding the exchange of a Golden Eagle for Pheasants at the Zoological Society of London, and the loan of boxes to trap Wallabies and Geese
SEC/7/18/13
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Item
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1876
Part of ZSL Secretaries
Letter from Lord William Frederick Scarlett, 3rd Baron Abinger, to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding a golden eagle
SUP/5/1/2/199
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File
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1946
Part of Superintendents
Correspondence between the Scottish Society for the Protection of Wild Birds and Geoffrey Marr Vevers regarding a Golden Eagle which was caught accidentally in a rabbit trap at Bora, rescued and sent to the Zoological Society of London
SUP/5/1/2/216
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File
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1946
Part of Superintendents
Correspondence with Geoffrey Marr Vevers regarding a Golden Eagle which accidentally trapped in Brora and sent to the Zoological Society of London by Mrs Jessie Tyser