Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
"It soon became apparent that all of the
the debris of the Jupiter cliffs had been cracked
away or pried in many places, gave E2
at the base of the cliffs. Up the beach
curled and saw the foot waves while the
grinding under time and the roar made
it impossible to speak. In the teeth of the
wind we proceeded westward and hardly
gone a mile out of the curl came a
magnificent female bear with one cub cut
about two feet long. She was headed
outward and did not see us, waddling
along the beach in search of food. The
wind finally deterred her for soon she
again turned into the curl. Finding one
cub have trouble with her we proceeded
slowly and again saw her in the first
trees along the beach while the little fellow
was climbing around in the conifer tree.
Finally she passed deeper into the fork