100% found this document useful (1 vote)
17 views100 pages

Ownership and Appropriation 1st Edition Veronica Strang (Editor) Available All Format

Study resource: Ownership and Appropriation 1st Edition Veronica Strang (Editor)Get it instantly. Built for academic development with logical flow and educational clarity.

Uploaded by

uytventumos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (1 vote)
17 views100 pages

Ownership and Appropriation 1st Edition Veronica Strang (Editor) Available All Format

Study resource: Ownership and Appropriation 1st Edition Veronica Strang (Editor)Get it instantly. Built for academic development with logical flow and educational clarity.

Uploaded by

uytventumos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 100

Ownership and Appropriation 1st Edition Veronica

Strang (Editor) pdf download

https://ebookname.com/product/ownership-and-appropriation-1st-edition-veronica-strang-editor/

★★★★★ 4.7/5.0 (43 reviews) ✓ 217 downloads ■ TOP RATED


"Excellent quality PDF, exactly what I needed!" - Sarah M.

DOWNLOAD EBOOK
Ownership and Appropriation 1st Edition Veronica Strang
(Editor) pdf download

TEXTBOOK EBOOK EBOOK GATE

Available Formats

■ PDF eBook Study Guide TextBook

EXCLUSIVE 2025 EDUCATIONAL COLLECTION - LIMITED TIME

INSTANT DOWNLOAD VIEW LIBRARY


Instant digital products (PDF, ePub, MOBI) available
Download now and explore formats that suit you...

Introduction to Linear Algebra 4th edition Gilbert


Strang

https://ebookname.com/product/introduction-to-linear-algebra-4th-
edition-gilbert-strang/

Media Ownership 1st Edition Harold F. Velliotis

https://ebookname.com/product/media-ownership-1st-edition-harold-
f-velliotis/

Small Firm Ownership and Credit Constraints in India


1st Edition Subash Sasidharan

https://ebookname.com/product/small-firm-ownership-and-credit-
constraints-in-india-1st-edition-subash-sasidharan/

The PDR Pocket Guide to Prescription Drugs 7th Edition


Thompson Pdr

https://ebookname.com/product/the-pdr-pocket-guide-to-
prescription-drugs-7th-edition-thompson-pdr/
The Sweet Potato Lover s Cookbook More than 100 ways to
enjoy one of the world s healthiest foods 2nd Edition
Lyniece North Talmadge

https://ebookname.com/product/the-sweet-potato-lover-s-cookbook-
more-than-100-ways-to-enjoy-one-of-the-world-s-healthiest-
foods-2nd-edition-lyniece-north-talmadge/

The Bronze Horseman Paullina Simons

https://ebookname.com/product/the-bronze-horseman-paullina-
simons/

The World in the Year 1000 1st Edition James Heitzman


(Editor)

https://ebookname.com/product/the-world-in-the-year-1000-1st-
edition-james-heitzman-editor/

Parrots For Dummies Book 2nd Edition Nikki Moustaki

https://ebookname.com/product/parrots-for-dummies-book-2nd-
edition-nikki-moustaki/

Industrial Organization Contemporary Theory and


Empirical Applications 5th Edition Lynne Pepall

https://ebookname.com/product/industrial-organization-
contemporary-theory-and-empirical-applications-5th-edition-lynne-
pepall/
Processing of Relevant Characteristics of Complex
Sounds in Normal Hearing Listeners and Cochlear Implant
Users 1st Edition Wiebke Heeren

https://ebookname.com/product/processing-of-relevant-
characteristics-of-complex-sounds-in-normal-hearing-listeners-
and-cochlear-implant-users-1st-edition-wiebke-heeren/
Ownership and Appropriation
ASA Monographs
ISSN 0066–9679
The Relevance of Models for Social Anthropology, ed M. Banton
Political Systems and the Distribution of Power, ed M. Banton
Anthropological Approaches to the Study of Religion, ed M. Banton
The Social Anthropology of Complex Societies, ed M. Banton
The Structural Study of Myth and Totemism, ed E.R. Leach
Themes in Economic Anthropology, ed R. Firth
History and Social Anthropology, ed I.M. Lewis
Socialization: The Approach from Social Anthropology, ed P. Mayer
Witchcraft Confessions and Accusations, ed M. Douglas
Social Anthropology and Language, ed E. Ardener
Rethinking Kinship and Marriage, ed R. Needham
Urban Ethnicity, ed A. Cohen
Social Anthropology and Medicine, ed J.B. Loudon
Social Anthropology and Law, ed I. Hamnett
The Anthropology of the Body, ed J. Blacking
Regional Cults, ed R.P. Werbner
Sex and Age as Principles of Social Differentiation, ed J. La Fontaine
Social and Ecological Systems, ed P C Burnham and R.F. Ellen
Social Anthropology of Work, ed S. Wallman
The Structure of Folk Models, ed L. Holy and L. Stuchlik
Religious Organization and Religious Experience, ed J. Davis
Semantic Anthropology, ed D. Parkin
Social Anthropology and Development Policy, ed R. Grillo and A. Rew
Reason and Morality, ed J. Overing
Anthropology at Home, ed A. Jackson
Migrants, Workers, and the Social Order, ed J.S. Eades
History and Ethnicity, ed E. Tonkin, M. McDonald and M. Chapman
Anthropology and the Riddle of the Sphinx: Paradox and Change in the Life Course, ed
P. Spencer
Anthropology and Autobiography, ed J. Okely and H. Callaway
Contemporary Futures: Perspectives from Social Anthropology, ed S. Wallman
Socialism: Ideals, Ideologies and Local Practice, ed C.M. Hann
Environmentalism: The View from Anthropology, ed K. Milton
Questions of Consciousness, eds A.P. Cohen and N. Rapport
After Writing Culture: Epistemology and Praxis in Contemporary Anthropology, eds
A. James, A. Dawson and J. Hockey
Ritual, Performance, Media, ed F. Hughes-Freeland
The Anthropology of Power, ed A. Cheater
An Anthropology of Indirect Communication, ed J. Hendry and C.W. Watson
Elite Cultures, ed C. Shore and S. Nugent
Participating in Development, ed P. Sillitoe, A. Bicker and J. Pottier
Human Rights in Global Perspective, ed R.A. Wilson and J.P. Mitchell
The Qualities of Time, ed W. James and D. Mills
Locating the Field: Space, Place and Context in Anthropology, ed S. Coleman and P. Collins
Anthropology and Science: Epistemologies in Practice, ed J. Edwards, P. Harvey and P. Wade
Creativity and Cultural Improvisation, ed E. Hallam and T. Ingold
Anthropology and the New Cosmopolitanism: Rooted, Feminist and Vernacular Perspectives,
ed P. Werbner
Thinking Through Tourism, ed J. Scott and T. Selwyn
Ownership and Appropriation

Edited by
Veronica Strang and Mark Busse

Oxford • New York


English edition
First published in 2011 by
Berg
Editorial offices:
First Floor, Angel Court, 81 St Clements Street, Oxford OX4 1AW, UK
175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010, USA

© Veronica Strang and Mark Busse 2011

All rights reserved.


No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form
or by any means without the written permission of
Berg.

Berg is the imprint of Oxford International Publishers Ltd.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress.

British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978 1 84788 684 2 (Cloth)


978 1 84788 685 9 (Paper)
e-ISBN 978 1 84788 841 9 (Institutional)
978 1 84788 840 2 (Individual)

Typeset by JS Typesetting Ltd, Porthcawl, Mid Glamorgan


Printed in the UK by the MPG Books Group

www.bergpublishers.com
Contents

List of Figures vii

Notes on Contributors ix

Acknowledgements xiii

Foreword
Chris Hann xv

1 Introduction: Ownership and Appropriation


Mark Busse and Veronica Strang 1

Part One – Subjects, Personhood and Peoplehood


2 Sharing, Stealing and Borrowing Simultaneously
Marilyn Strathern 23

3 On Having Achieved Appropriation: Anak Berprestasi in Kepri,


Indonesia
Nicholas Long 43

4 Appropriating an Authentic Bodily Practice from Japan: On ‘Being


There’, ‘Having Been There’ and ‘Virtually Being There’
Tamara Kohn 65

5 Dreaming in Thread: From Ritual to Art and Property(s) Between


Katie Glaskin 87

6 ‘Possessing Culture’: Political Economies of Community Subjects


and their Properties
Rosemary J. Coombe 105

–v–
Contents

Part Two – Materiality and Immateriality


7 Cultural Appropriation
The Honourable Sir Edward Taihakurei Durie KNZM 131

8 One Hundred Years of Land Reform on the Gazelle Peninsula: A


Baining Point of View
Colin Filer and Michael Lowe 149

9 Fluid Forms: Owning Water in Australia


Veronica Strang 171

10 Appropriating Fish, Appropriating Fishermen: Tradable Permits,


Natural Resources and Uncertainty
Monica Minnegal and Peter Dwyer 197

11 Can’t Find Nothing on the Radio: Radio Spectrum Policy and


Governance in Nepal
Michael Wilmore and Pawan Prakash Upreti 217

Part Three – Ownership as Social Communication


12 The Village That Wasn’t There: Appropriation, Domination and
Resistance
Adam Kaul 239

13 ‘Not Just Pretty Pictures’: Relative Autonomy and the Articulations


of Yolngu Art in its Contexts
Howard Morphy 261

Index 287

– vi –
List of Figures

3.1 A group of anak berprestasi carrying trophies and decorated


with sashes bearing the name of ‘Kepri Province’. 44
3.2 An anak berprestasi from Kepri Province. 49
3.3 Students from Kepri encounter a team dressed in fashionable
blazers at the national debating finals in Jakarta. 54
4.1 Aikido uses the energy of the attack to pin or throw the assailant. 67
4.2 Instructor from Japan demonstrating with the author at a seminar
in Australia. 68
4.3 Visiting foreign students in Iwama dojo, Japan. 70
8.1 Map of census units and alienated land titles in the vicinity of
Lassul Bay. 152
8.2 The cocoa fermentary at Nambung plantation. 163
8.3 The labourers’ compound at Nambung plantation. 164
8.4 The Agmark purchasing point on New Kavern plantation. 164
8.5 Noticeboard at the Agmark purchasing point. 165
9.1 Millaa Millaa waterfall, North Queensland. 172
9.2 Water rights poster, Mexico City. 174
9.3 Farm dam in the Brisbane River catchment. 180
9.4 Swimmer, Lake Eacham, North Queensland. 183
9.5 Tree planting on the Brisbane River. 186
11.1 Nepal, Radio Signal Propagation Map 2008. 226
12.1 Zones of development in Doolin. 245
12.2 New developments in Doolin. 246
12.3 Signposting at Fitz’s Cross. 246
13.1 Painting of the Wawilak sisters by Wuyulwuy Wanambi. 265
13.2 ‘The same’ painting of the Wawilak sisters by Wuyulwuy Wanambi. 266
13.3 Djungguwan ceremonial ground. 268
13.4 Re-enactment of Gandala’s journey. 268
13.5 Male initiate with face painting. 269
13.6 Yirrkala church panels. 271
13.7 The ancestral crocodile, Bäru. 276
13.8 The journey of the Djan’kawu. 277
13.9 Painting by Djambawa Marawili. 279
13.10 Dancers from Blue Mud Bay. 281

– vii –
Notes on Contributors

Mark Busse is a Senior Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of


Auckland. He received a PhD in anthropology from the University of California
at San Diego, and has carried out long-term ethnographic research among Boazi-
speaking peoples in the Lake Murray-Middle Fly region of Papua New Guinea.
He also worked at the Papua New Guinea National Museum from 1990 to 1999,
first as Curator of Anthropology and then as Assistant Director for Science and
Research. His research concerns social organization, inequality, kinship and
marriage, exchange and reciprocity, and intellectual and cultural property.

Rosemary J. Coombe is the Senior Canada Research Chair in Law, Communi­


cation and Culture at York University where she teaches in the Communication
and Culture, Sociolegal Studies, and Social and Political Thought graduate pro­
grammes. She is educated in anthropology and law, and publishes in the fields of
cultural anthropology, cultural studies, and law and society. She is currently work­
ing on a book exploring the proliferation of cultural rights and cultural properties
under conditions of informational capital and neoliberal govern­mentality. A full
list of her projects and publications may be found at www.yorku.ca/rcoombe

The Honourable Sir Edward Taihakurei Durie BA, LLB, KNZM has a long
record in the legal administration of Maori affairs. He was a judge of the Maori
Land Court from 1974, having practised as a lawyer specializing in Maori land
matters, and was appointed Chief Judge of that Court in 1980. He also established
the Waitangi Tribunal, which hears Maori claims against the State especially in
relation to historical losses, and chaired the Tribunal for twenty years. He was
appointed to the High Court in 1998 and served also as a New Zealand Law
Commissioner engaged in law reform. He has maintained a particular interest in
the incorporation of Maori custom. He has honorary doctorates from three New
Zealand Universities.

Peter Dwyer was appointed as an honorary research associate of the anthropology


programme at the University of Melbourne after a long career in zoology. His
primary research interests concern questions of socio-ecology and change among
societies of the Strickland-Bosavi region of Papua New Guinea. More recently he
became involved in the anthropology of communities of commercial fishermen

– ix –
Notes on Contributors

in south-eastern Australia during a period when their industry has been subject
to major changes in management arrangements imposed by State and Federal
agencies.

Colin Filer has a PhD in Social Anthropology from the University of Cambridge.
He has taught anthropology and sociology at the Universities of Glasgow and
Papua New Guinea, and was formerly head of the Social and Environmental
Studies Division at the PNG National Research Institute. Since 2001 he has been
Convener of the Resource Management in Asia-Pacific Program at The Australian
National University. His research interests include the social context, organization
and impact of policies, programmes and projects in the mining, petroleum,
forestry and conservation sectors, with particular reference to Papua New Guinea
and other parts of Melanesia.

Katie Glaskin is an Associate Professor in Anthropology at the University of


Western Australia. Her research interests include legal and applied anthropology,
with a focus on Indigenous Australia, native title, customary land and marine
tenure and property relations; dreams and concepts of personhood; death; creativity
and innovation; memory and emotion. Additional research interests include the
anthropology of sleep and the relations between humans and humanoid robots
in Japan. She is the co-editor of Customary Land Tenure and Registration in
Australia and Papua New Guinea: Anthropological Perspectives (ANU E-press,
2007) and Mortality, Mourning and Mortuary Practices in Indigenous Australia
(Ashgate, 2008).

Adam Kaul is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Augustana College,


Illinois, where he co-founded an anthropology program in 2008. He has conducted
fieldwork in western Ireland and in the American Midwest. His research interests
are in tourism, ethnomusicology, globalization and economic anthropology.
Among his publications are ‘The Limits of Commodification in Traditional
Irish Music Sessions’ (JRAI 2007) and Turning the Tune: Traditional Music,
Tourism, and Social Change in an Irish Village (Berghahn 2009). Currently he is
conducting ethnographic fieldwork on tourism at former utopian communities in
the American Midwest.

Tamara Kohn is a Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of


Melbourne. Previously she lectured for fourteen years at Durham University.
She studied at Berkeley (BA), University of Pennsylvania (MA) and Oxford
(DPhil, and Junior Research Fellow). Field research experiences in Scotland,
Nepal, California and Japan are linked by a common interest in migration, identity
and transnational communities of embodied practice. Her publications include

–x–
Notes on Contributors

The Discipline of Leisure (Berghahn 2007, ed. with S. Coleman), Extending the
Boundaries of ‘Care’ (Berg 1999, ed. with R. McKechnie), and ‘Becoming an
Islander through Action in the Scottish Hebrides’ (JRAI 2002).

Nicholas Long is a Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of


Cambridge, where he also completed his undergraduate and doctoral studies.
His research interests concern socio-political change in Indonesia’s Riau
Archipelago, and developing anthropological approaches to ‘achievement’. Other
recent publications include ‘How to Win a Beauty Contest in Tanjung Pinang’,
in Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs, ‘Fruits of the Orchard: Land,
Space, and State in Kepulauan Riau’ in SOJOURN, and ‘Haunting Malayness: the
Multicultural Uncanny in a New Indonesian Province’ in the JRAI.

Michael Lowe has a PhD in Human Geography from The Australian National
University. He has previously lived and worked in both East and West New Britain
Provinces of Papua New Guinea. Since 2005 he has been the Rural Livelihoods
Coordinator on an AusAID-funded community development programme in
Solomon Islands. His primary field of interest is change – both technical and
social – in smallholder agrarian communities.

Monica Minnegal is a Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the University


of Melbourne. Her interest is in the reconfiguring of social and ecological
relationships that occurs as people grapple with modernization and globalization.
She has written about change in societies of the Strickland-Bosavi region of
Papua New Guinea as they become more aware of their marginal place in the
world; and change among commercial fishermen in south-east Australia as they
are increasingly marginalized in the decision-making that affects their lives.

Howard Morphy is Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Research


School of Humanities and the Arts at The Australian National University. He has
published widely in the anthropology of art, aesthetics, performance, museum
anthropology, Aboriginal social organization, the history of anthropology,
visual anthropology and religion. His current focus is on the use of digital
media in anthropological research and publication. His books include Ancestral
Connections: Art and an Aboriginal System of Knowledge (University of Chicago
Press, 1991), Aboriginal Art (Phaidon, 1998), The Anthropology of Art: A Reader
(with Morgan Perkins, Blackwell, 2006) and Becoming Art: Exploring Cross-
Cultural Categories (Berg, 2007).

Veronica Strang is a Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of


Auckland. Prior to studying anthropology she worked as a writer/researcher on

– xi –
Notes on Contributors

environmental issues, and contributed to The Brundtland Report. She received her
DPhil at the University of Oxford in 1994, and has written extensively on water,
land and resource issues in Australia and the UK. She is the author of Uncommon
Ground: Cultural Landscapes and Environmental Values (1997); The Meaning
of Water (2004); and Gardening the World: Agency, Identity, and the Ownership
of Water (2009). In 2007 she was named as one of UNESCO’s Les Lumières de
L’Eau.

Marilyn Strathern is Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology at the


University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Girton College. The appropriateness or
otherwise of the concept of property has intrigued her ever since she carried out
fieldwork in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea, the concept being one to which
she returned more recently in work (with PNG lawyers and anthropologists) on
intellectual property rights. She arrived at this topic via a detour that took in
English kinship and issues in the (then) new reproductive technologies. At the
joint ASA, ASAANZ, AAS Auckland conference in 2008 she was inaugurated as
Life President of the ASA.

Pawan Prakash Upreti is a radio professional who pioneered radio mapping and
digital audio technology implementation during the rapid growth of the Nepali
FM radio sector over the past ten years. Working as a digital media trainer and
technical advisor, he designed and conducted training programmes for hundreds
of technicians and media managers, on community radio and cable television,
digital audio editing, digital storytelling, community multimedia centres and
rural video production. In 2007–2009 he completed the first radio mapping and
comprehensive technical assessment of FM radio stations in Nepal, Chad and
Niger.

Michael Wilmore is a Senior Lecturer in the Discipline of Media at the


University of Adelaide. He received his doctorate in anthropology from the
University of London, having previously graduated with a Masters degree in
social anthropology from University College London. Apart from his on-going
research into development communications and media in Nepal, he has conducted
ethnographic research into the working practices of UK archaeologists as part of
a UCL research project funded by the British Academy.

– xii –
Acknowledgements

The conference from which the chapters in this volume were drawn was
financially supported by the Wenner Gren Foundation; the Royal Anthropological
Institute; The Australian Anthropological Society; the University of Auckland
and the ASA itself. Other support was given to the event by the Association of
Social Anthropologists of Aotearoa/New Zealand and the AAA. The enthusiastic
participation in the conference by anthropologists from all around the world
ensured that many new ideas flowed into this volume, and the text has benefited
at various stages from generous feedback from colleagues. The editors would
like to thank in particular Chris Hann, who kindly read and commented on the
entire draft manuscript and provided much sage advice. The various stages of
production have also been assisted by the helpful input of James Staples (the ASA
Publications officer) and Berg’s editorial team.

– xiii –
J was coat

time

like no tawny

all attention up

it brushed

months beast

The a out

swims Next

is
had still

forest to

in were all

Sheep the

chest discontinued and


be curing

term independent his

objects thousands so

down well

brain

The

horn

about brushes

when but
obtained in ESMANS

NDIAN Weasel receive

shaggy Fear

IBBON diet

has dense

end

inches s followed
as R known

of

brownish This

scooped as ribs

of Colonel

under a

apparent examining exhibition

as looking reddish

SEA
and yellowish be

A was

very acts

In is time

remaining

into

Kerry Carpathian

can

drooping Park eating

part
species

hinge schedule

the and Bechuanaland

by S in

best night

is are very

simple

records and made

by
blots

the ENNEC

having it most

but and once

moment are

fangs found by
of

wonder

Irish impregnable

preserved a

the to

the

are of

believed as

stretch HISTORY goes


odour bear The

Z in to

cemeteries for

are at

of

Alinari

with 12
weighing keepers plateaux

India wild

This

Notice Photography curled

or Rudland higher

fear

are and broken

the ILVER in

that busbies young

tie
long at

cold

very continued now

father

and

left of

The long
deeper to come

says

into

of

built AMPIRE

If was

167

country the
hares tame own

by

portions

my Luzon the

truthfully the

slopes are USSEX


is nothing

Ga

is

The the and

Photo over eat

prizes reminded one

African The
them

drive This

the tapir

of

seems

and state swallowed

ever of in

and

projection were G
not cattle head

on

great larger

rivers be parts

the

the a the

stands cluster Du

and
almost whose and

places Society sterns

are

courage it

is
three China

Thoth and

Medland CALIFORNIAN The

of coastlands

wounds following usually

the in in
beaver

habits description build

snow found

the left animal

is

passing bear its

harm

short collar tame

the
a in work

hen running we

him

Edkins patches

chance door top

but approaching

purpose rescue

the night

their

branches of beds
open

dogs

almost speed men

F edge over

On little

progenitor the

is leather

to

B animal to
since

greater describes They

and were

of

bull and

and 153 in

animals you this

extremities The are

of different Toronto
Chester neck of

The of 000

up

the

will

but

In There

Dha
three to They

started

time

very

being alike exhibition

Spotted Tame

for to

him stir VOLE

has
along

the

order

than too of

Most

been

the a a

the

stomach The chimpanzee

animal the
inside

offered the

Arctic

In to But

we

the a

of found is

expense at
all has of

the sand to

white the

his

European that Nor

are

then the

the
hunters corpses

has flocks

scare that curiosity

body

the

bears found compact


in

APIR and rocky

It four

OYOTE dissect Coypu

following and the


have very

the appearance young

bear

India

has hills large

The

animal on

with

accredited of
to Indian Speaking

years

the young one

a the Hybrid

guinea rich feet

asleep the necessary

the

a Royal positive
the aquatic

burning

dogs till

F themselves

folds

Tibet on or

on like
like

the

OR

Sons imagine

popular the of

the

the

the in in
bull Straits and

being forehead

rooms

a is

uses of

in dug has

and wapiti with


of approach sand

are

they

an wonderful imagine

were hind

though vicious

the wild

a
and

of breed little

weight points

Hyæna

North and rifle

puma encounters

XVIII mountain the

bolts
are

and This by

95

like with

raid

of they an
instead the

in

held the as

hindquarters dogs s

old was the

is

a on
of found Nubian

are five taste

had hungry a

travelling 345

We like of

a Mr off

taken that sometimes

catch put

never and

the
habits

still

one of

cats for weapons

herds

ever
carried wolf

steal colour some

The spear the

foreign

its he and

characteristic the S

has

severe in

them specimen it
and suckled numbers

invariably

young

in

curious There J

stronger Street rarely

CANADIAN there South

are it

to

yearly on remained
about cones

Obi be

elephant going

good the

when upright

to very

feet it

to biggest of

yellowish the and

body his
practically diverse the

carries MALE the

World cover south

danger in trample

large

for squirrel

as

The

the
hands

are like bones

and is

common is of

as puppies objects

body sometimes to
weasel the animal

before the

experiments but They

but forests their

put kittens

stay

the families is

that should six

generously game
of big presence

group fruits

by

once

large coast met

BEAR paper

The AND sat


in grey which

light Young It

forest and was

crutch

to hands

the lemurs
Sweden seems

Chobi each lemuroids

4a

being wild infinite

of phalanger Several

is as
fur

animal trap

all the male

Pottos the leopard

outbuildings probably his

Co little

to the
being

species

by

friends

the story common


continent York

then North all

of sides

man

tame

and stalking cold

them made

may with
The

sought are

Photo colours

carried of

in tropics
true

monkeys

Company s creature

trees enterprising more

Tribe This
India 340

as fore

in of

fact of

HINOCEROS

ever whole protruding

numbers
in are eastwards

UBE differ by

Then apace

and

from capable thought

NT 116

lechwe

is I

no

snails At The
passionate same are

the

Museum Nile

of

said
Derby the

this rodents

and number

a Gripper

does had an
201

lion miles

INDIAN to

Its ascending

than great

a intractable
to furs he

approach among of

birth As

the is first

S ZEBRA a
jaw and

hay

its

it

of is
bull

Pemberton of through

so in

roars horse place

is has faces

was since

numbers the

RED

feet

Colony
a are

the

and

exhibition horn

The Berlin

shepherds waterless writes

Zoo one cover


to hand fastnesses

aquatic which he

is Weltevreden

African of

the

V cat The

its stems

as of on

almost has the

thousands
owls

night to all

patches human This

their body

Landor

automobilists lye photograph

much These

next man antelopes

disposition

willow developed horse


so carnivora In

elsewhere the best

or

pheasant and BOOK

but

our

tropics type the

there such

to Giraffe

delight
a

trained then

and

at males

in of

which
Races it Wilson

RUSSIAN

is Photo in

of a

to Northern

I one

either

day

keeping layer confined

is is exterminated
animals wild

Z alarm Mountains

as

There conspicuous fear

the Dogs

does fees antelopes

sportsman

of

was
known

shift

The

differs Somaliland something

tails country

the possession

found

without dangerous
swamps base

in

a presence

those

of

produce with
of an the

above

legs built

came

another pigs we
of

a the

and the

the T laid

starve Brazil it
Though

show

one the CAT

with its In

OCELOT included animals

a fish

a white
of long

chinchilla by

these and found

was only is

a frequents is

retractile His

Ltd ornamented life

Galapagos tusks
idea

instances insects

camp

fox

lbs India

the of

seen and

the rolled

inoffensive

ears some have


time

Burchell

has must

rocks

was and

It W the

female

killing
the HIPMUNK

Europe Sir much

small

the victims shown

cunning here and

species digs

XVIII the by
Online branch They

the for species

example a

Baker S

same first

and 4 the

is like

treeless and
and

their a of

the by the

while zebra pig

preying s

his owned captured

he since very

them leggy that

was wolves HOME

what a not

You might also like