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Yosemite Nature Notes
Yosemite Nature Notes 1 (1922)
Mimeographed; first issue July 10, 1922; edited by Ansel F. Hall; weekly during the summer, 8 issues.
- YNN 1(1) (July 10, 1922) First issue [PDF]
- “Many Visit Water Ouzel’s Nest,” 1(1):1
- “Gray Squirrels Rarely Seen This Year,” 1(1):1
- “Wednesdays Furnish Best Bird Trips,” 1(1):1
- “Kinglet’s Nest Displayed at Museum,” 1(1):1
- Red-Winged Blackbirds Nesting in Meadows,” 1(1):1
- “Tame Flying Squirrels Not Present This Year,” 1(1):2
- “Wild Bears May Be Seen at the Bear Pits,” 1(1):2
- “Many Nest[s] Discovered by Nature Guides,” 1(1):2
- “Fishing Good,” 1(1):2
- “Cross Section of Big Tree Attracts Crowds” [Giant Sequoia], 1(1):2
- “Specimen of Pigmy Owl Secured,” 1(1):2
- “Evening Primrose Furnishes Motion Pictures,” 1(1):3
- “Flowers,” 1(1):3
- “Rare Blossoms Exhibited at Flower Show,” 1(1):3
- “Spicebush or Wineflower a Conspicuous Shrub on the El Portal Road,” 1(1):3
- “Flower Show Started at Camp Curry,” 1(1):3
- “Popularity of the Yosemite Museum,” 1(1):3
- “Yosemite Relief Model Almost Completed” [built by Ansel F. Hall], 1(1):3
- “Nature Guide Service Reports Record Attendance,” 1(1):4
- “Large Collection of Indian Baskets Received by the Museum,” 1(1):4
- “Rattlesnake Attempts to Swallow a Lizard Big as Self,” 1(1):4
- “Boy Scouts Learn of Yosemite History,” 1(1):4
- “Well Known Naturalist Visits the Valley” [Loye H. Miller], 1(1):4
- YNN 1(2) (July 17, 1922) [PDF]
- “Two Arrivals in Yosemite Valley” [Prickly Poppy and Knotweed], 1(2):1
- “Mariposa Lilies,” 1(2):1
- “Black-Eyed Susan,” 1(2):1
- “Yosemite Relief Model Being Painted,” 1(2):1
- “Life Rattle-Snake May Be Seen at Museum,” 1(2):2
- “Mule Deer Often Seen,” 1(2):2
- “Valley Elk to be Seen in Paddock,” 1(2):2
- “Gophers and Moles Inhabit Meadows,” 1(2):2
- “Tanager’s Nest Found,” 1(2):2
- “Chickadees Common at Higher Elevations,” 1(2):2
- “What is the Bird on Cloud’s Rest?” [Clarks nutcracker] 1(2):3
- “Many Birds through Nesting,” 1(2):3
- “Canyon Wren Occasionally Heard,” 1(2):3
- “Violet Greek Swallow Now Feeds over Meadows,” 1(2):3
- “Largest of Woodpeckers Seen,” 1(2):3
- YNN 1(3) (July 24, 1922) [PDF]
- “Sea Gulls in Tuolumne Meadows Interest Visitors,” 1(3):1
- “Fifty-Two Traverse Pohono Trail Saturday,” 1(3):1
- “Tame Cinnamon Bear at Glacier Point,” 1(3):1
- “Golden Eagles Reported Seen,” 1(3):1
- “White-Tailed Jackrabbits Inhabit High Country,” 1(3):2
- “An Old Fallacy” [porcupine does not shoot quills], 1(3):2
- “Marmots May Be Seen along Tioga Road,” 1(3):2
- “Childrens’ Trips Offered,” 1(3):2
- YNN 1(4) (July 31, 1922) [PDF]
- “The ‘White Snow Plant’” [Pleuricospora fimbriolata], 1(4):1
- “Wanted: Live Mice and Gophers” [to feed snakes], 1(4):1
- “Exhibit of Papoose Carriers at Museum,” 1(4):1
- “What is the Lizard with the Red Head?,” 1(4):2
- “Tame Bears Delight Visitors,” 1(4):2
- “The Sierra Grouse,” 1(4):2
- “Post Nesting Season Migrants Appear” [birds], 1(4):2
- “Hermit Thrush Nests among Camp Curry Tents,” 1(4):2
- “Hummingbird Likes Red,” 1(4):3
- “Three Kinds of Squirrels at Glacier Point,” 1(4):3
- “The Evening Primrose,” 1(4):3
- “The Spice Bush,” 1(4):3
- YNN 1(5) (August 7, 1922) (misnumbered as number 4) [PDF]
- “How the Indians Made Their Arrow Points,” 1(5):1
- “Do Your Botanizing at the Flower Exhibits,” 1(5):1
- “Weasels Occasionally Seen,” 1(5):1
- “Mountain Lions May Be Seen in Zoo” [Yosemite Zoo], 1(5):1-2
- “The Blue-Fronted Jay” [Steller’s jay], 1(5):2
- “The Scarlet Monkey Flower” [Mimulus sp.], 1(5):2
- “The Swift” [fence lizard], 1(5):2
- “Big Trees in Valley,” 1(5):2
- “The Development of a Pine Cone,” 1(5):2-3
- YNN 1(6) (August 15, 1922) [PDF]
- “The Doodle-Bug or Ant-Lion,” 1(6):1
- “Why Do We See so Few Mammals?,” 1(6):1
- “Mystery Skin Baffles Scientists” [house cat], 1(6):2
- “The Kingfisher” [Belted Kingfisher], 1(6):2
- “Birds Unusually Silent in August” [moulting season], 1(6):2
- “Spirea” [Spirea densiflora], 1(6):2-3
- “Western Pennyroyal” [Monardella lanciolata], 1(6):3
- “Scarlet Monkey-Flower” [Mimulus cardinalis], 1(6):3
- YNN 1(7) (August 21, 1922) [PDF]
- “The Giant Sequoia,” 1(7):1
- “The Western Evening Grosbeak,” 1(7):1
- “Owls,” 1(7):2
- “Public Appreciates Nature Guide Service,” 1(7):2
- “What Bird Lives Here?” [bird habitats], 1(7):2
- YNN 1(8) (September 1, 1922) [PDF]
- “Dragons” [dragon fly], 1(8):1
- “Acorns Used for Food” [Indian use of black oak acorns], 1(8):1-2
- “When Yosemite Valley Was a Lake,” 1(8):2
- “White Ants” [termites], 1(8):2-3
Bibliographical Information
Ansel F. Hall, editor.
Yosemite Nature Notes 1 (1922)
(Yosemite National Park: Yosemite Natural History Association, 1922).
Mimeographed, 28 cm.
Weekly July - September, 8 issues.
Number 5 (August 7, 1922) is misnumbered as number 4.
LCCN 54040211.
Library of Congress call number QH1.Y6.
U. S. Government Document Call Number: I 29.119
Digitized by Dan Anderson, May 2007,
from a copy at Young Research Library (UCLA).
—Dan Anderson, www.yosemite.ca.us
Next: volume 2 (1923)
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Yosemite Nature Notes
http://www.yosemite.ca.us/library/yosemite_nature_notes/1/