Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
algarrobo (Prosopis flexuosa), melote (Jobinia specinlacta), Sombra de Toro (Jobina rhomb.), and chinar (Geoffroea decorticans). One of the attendants said 90% caldon. There is also a zoo and a huge pecan area that contains red deer & javali etc.
Drove three of the attendants into Santa Rosa at closing time, then north 10 or 15 km and camped in a strip of caldon on the edge of a plowed field that reached beyond the horizon.
Between General Ochoa and Santa Rosa the road runs SE of some grass-covered hills. The road cuts through them a few km N of Santa Rosa. There are two-tower living in them.
Nov 21. Wind died down during the night, cool, heavy dew.
Heard a touro at 7:30 a.m.: a single note repeated monotonously for 20 or 30 seconds. Hot, sleek, & tawney tucos in the road. Drove north through rich jacufoa; caldón + cattle. Passed many white-harvesting ripe lucid well controlled, but saw none working. Corn or sorghum up in the north, but not planted yet or barely rip down near Santa Rosa. Didn't see a stream from Rio Colorado to Rio Quinto, and it barely flowing. Hares, shrubs, opossums DO R, saw numerous tucanos along the busy highway.
Saw an approximation of miuna murinda 7.4 km S of the Rio Quinto, on the west side of Highway 35. The country is very slightly rolling but smooth. These