Robert Harding

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832-399991 - Two woman, Indians, Kiowa, after a picture by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Kiowa or Kaigwu are an ethnic tribe of the Indians of North America, from what is now western Montana, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from the period
832-399992 - Indian, Pablino Diaz, Kiowa, after a picture by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Kiowa or Kaigwu are an ethnic tribe of the Indians of North America, from what is now western Montana, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from the period
832-399993 - Indians, Yellow Magpie, Arapahoe, after a picture by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Arapaho or Arapahoe are an Indian people of North America and belonged as nomadic Plains Indians to the cultural area of the Prairies and Plains, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from that time
832-400001 - Chief Goes To War, Chief Hollow Horn Bear, two chiefs with feather headdresses, Sioux, North American Indian people, after a painting by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from the period
832-400000 - Naiche, hereditary chief, serving the army, Chiricahua Apaches, an Apache tribal group in the southwestern United States, after a painting by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from the period
832-400002 - Freckled Face, woman from the Arapahoe tribe, an Indian people of North America, after a picture by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from that time
832-400003 - Spies On The Enemy, Chief with feather headdress, Crow, North American Indian tribe, after a painting by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from the period
832-400005 - Cloud Man, Assinaboines, a people of the Indians of North America, after a picture by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original of the time
832-400006 - Indian, Omaha, dancing bonnet and hair ornament, feather, after a picture by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, Omaha are a North American Indian tribe from the Dhegiha branch of the Sioux language family, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from the period
832-400007 - Cloud Man, Assinaboine, after a painting by F.A.Rinehart, 1899, a people of the Indians of North America, historically belonging to the cultural area of the Prairie Indians, Historic, digitally restored reproduction of an original from that time
832-398578 - Zebra black and white stripes pattern displays in a vertical texture, fur, and hair in a closeup image. The close-up is from the shoulder in B&W. Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, Africa
1350-6678 - Strawberry Poison Frog (Dendrobates pumilio), adult, Bastimentos National Park, Bocas del Toro, Panama. The strawberry poison frog or strawberry poison-dart frog (Oophaga pumilio or Dendrobates pumilio) is a species of small amphibian poison dart frog found in Central America. It is common throughout its range, which extends from eastern central Nicaragua through Costa Rica and northwestern Panama. The species is often found in humid lowlands and premontane forest, but large populations are also found in disturbed areas such as plantations. The strawberry poison frog is perhaps most famous for its widespread variation in coloration, comprising approximately 15���30 color morphs, most of which are presumed to be true-breeding. O. pumilio, while not the most poisonous of the dendrobatids, is the most toxic member of its genus. The species is most diverse in Panama with varieties in vivid shades of all red, orange, blue, yellow or green, green and yellow, white with red, orange or black and spotted varieties. The most colorful mix is found in Isla Bastimentos Marine National Park though not all in one place. Colors vary by location. A beach on the north side of the island is named after the species. Two of Southern Explorations' Panama tours visit red frog habitat. Both the eight-day Panama Adventure trip and eleven-day Panama Highlights trip spend time in Isla Bastimentos Marine National Park and the former also goes to Red Frog Beach. The red frog is not as poisonous as some of its cousins and is not a threat to humans. It subsists on a diet of ants that dine on poisonous plants, providing the red frog its protective skin toxin. Males attract females with a loud quick chirp. To hear the distinctive sound before you depart on your Panama tours, go to the University of Michigan Museum's biodiversity website (www.animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu.) After birth, the tadpoles climb aboard the mother who deposits them in different protected areas where she retu