Carol Patton looks into a Sherman live trap to see what was

Carol Patton looks into a Sherman live trap to see what was caught on Tuesday, August 12, 2008, at upper Young Lake in Yosemite National Park. Retired U.C. Berkeley professor Jim Patton, his wife Carol and Les Chow, data manager with the National Park Service work on the Joseph Grinnell re-survey project. The original Grinnell survey in 1915 collected baseline data on small mammals and other wildlife in the Sierra Nevada. (Photo by RandyPench/Sacramento Bee/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
Carol Patton looks into a Sherman live trap to see what was caught on Tuesday, August 12, 2008, at upper Young Lake in Yosemite National Park. Retired U.C. Berkeley professor Jim Patton, his wife Carol and Les Chow, data manager with the National Park Service work on the Joseph Grinnell re-survey project. The original Grinnell survey in 1915 collected baseline data on small mammals and other wildlife in the Sierra Nevada. (Photo by RandyPench/Sacramento Bee/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
Carol Patton looks into a Sherman live trap to see what was
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Credit:
Sacramento Bee / Contributor
Editorial #:
112897952
Collection:
Tribune News Service
Date created:
August 12, 2008
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Source:
Tribune News Service
Object name:
20080830-AMX-US_NEWS_ENV-SIERRA-WILD(2)