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Point Reyes National Seashore
Resource Newsletter: 1906 Earthquake Centennial
1906 Earthquake Centennial Resource Newsletter. Train on its side after 1906 Earthquake in Point Reyes Station.
 

Complete resource newsletter (5,850 KB PDF)

This document has been divided into smaller-sized files so that visitors with slower internet connections have the option of downloading desired chapters and/or figures separately if they do not wish to download the complete document as a single large file.

Page 1 (2,040 KB PDF) | Page 2 (333 KB PDF) | Page 3 (262 KB PDF) | Page 4 (614 KB PDF)
Page 5 (510 KB PDF) | Page 6 (601 KB PDF) | Page 7 (863 KB PDF) | Page 8 (946 KB PDF)

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Tule Elk  

Did You Know?
In the mid-1800s, the tule elk was hunted to the brink of extinction. The last surviving tule elk were discovered and protected in the southern San Joaquin Valley in 1874. In 1978, ten tule elk were reintroduced to Point Reyes, which now has one of California's largest populations, numbering ~500.
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Last Updated: March 28, 2009 at 16:42 EST