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Summer 1997
Vol. 50:3
At Little Petroglyph canyon in the Coso Mountains
on the northwestern edge of the Mojave desert is one of the most remarkable
concentrations of rock art in the world.
Photograph by
Fred hirschmann.
Departments
Here at the Academy
Spiderman
Keith K. Howell
Counterpoints
in Science
The Stuff Such Dreams are Made of
Jerold M. Lowenstein
Horizons
Under the Volcano
Blake Edgar
Habitats
In My Backyard, Yes, But Not Me
Gordy Slack
Reviews
Robert Drewes
on Snakes
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Features
Sprited Stones on Ancient Walls
Reading the Rock Art of China Lake
Thomas Curwen
A Feeling for the Fossil Record
An Interview with Geerat Vermeij
Gordy Slack
At Home
in the
Natural World
Naturalist's Almanac
What to see this Summer
Gordy Slack
A
Trail Less Traveled
Jughandle State Reserve
Rasa Gustaitis
A
Letter from the Field
Into the Heart of Uganda's Impenetrable Forest
Robert C. Drewes
Not
available online:
Dinosaurs in California?
Among the Cretaceous Volcanoes Roamed a Unique Fauna
Frank DeCourten
Closing in on Quasars
The End of a Violent Youth
Seth Shostak
Editorial
Fifty Years On
Keith K. Howell
Wild Lives
California Turret Spider
Leonard S. Vincent
Skyguide
Summer's Milky Way
Bing F. Quock
Letters
Stands for Squirrels
T. Rex Lineage
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