What do you do with more than 130 arsenic-tinged taxidermied animals with significant historical and academic value, languishing in a now-closed museum that may or may not be a public health hazard?
Tigers, zebras and other taxidermy animals will get new homes after health concerns kept them hidden
(AP) — Crocodiles, monkeys, tigers, zebras and dozens of other taxidermy animals will move to new homes after concerns about arsenic exposure forced the closure of the South Dakota museum where they ...
BRYCE CANYON — Right off of state Route 12, as you are nearing the turn to go to Bryce Canyon National Park, sits a small but mighty museum. The Bryce Canyon Wildlife Conservation Museum is something ...
Read full article: Jay North, actor who starred in ‘Dennis the Menace’ sitcom, dies at 73 in Lake Butler home: TMZ Get ready to spring into savings with exclusive Insider Deals designed to refresh ...
Taxidermy animals from the Brockhouse Collection at the Delbridge Museum of Natural History in Sioux Falls, S.D. (Great Plains Zoo) Crocodiles, monkeys, tigers, zebras and dozens of other taxidermy ...
Travelers across the U.S. will be able to see portions of a unique collection after the museum where they had been exhibited was forced to close. The Delbridge Museum of Natural History at the Great ...
Anyone with information in reference to this investigation is encouraged to contact Detective R. Celaya at 432-335-4937 or Odessa Crime Stoppers at 432-333-TIPS and reference Case #18-11961. The ...
John Anthony hooked impressive fish on back-to-back days out of Sandy Lick Creek near Brookville in 2022. He was proud of the pair of catches and wanted to get the 21-inch rainbow trout and 15-inch ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. Crocodiles, monkeys, tigers, zebras and ...
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Tigers, zebras and other stuffed animals will get new homes after health concerns kept them hidden
Crocodiles, monkeys, tigers, zebras and dozens of other taxidermy animals will move to new homes after concerns about arsenic exposure forced the closure of the South Dakota museum where they had been ...
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