| UID |
|
| Digital Object Type |
Rare birds documentation form |
| Content DM Link |
https://n2t.net/ark:/87292/w9n58cn9c |
| Type |
Text |
| Description |
Rare bird documentation form for a Golden Eagle at Oak Grove Park in Sioux County, IA on November 6, 1998. |
| Related Genres |
Field notes |
| Sort Date |
1998-11-06 |
| People / Organizations |
|
| Time |
10:00 AM |
| Rights |
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. However, for this Item, either (a) no rights-holder(s) have been identified or (b) one or more rights-holder(s) have been identified but none have been located. If you have any information that can contribute to identifying or locating the rights-holder(s) please notify the Iowa State University Library Digital Initiatives Program (digital@iastate.edu). (Rightsstatements.org InC-RUU 1.0). The original object is available at the Iowa State University Library Special Collections and University Archives (archives@iastate.edu). |
| Data Access Rights |
http://vertnet.org/resources/norms.html |
| Data License |
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0 |
| Collection |
Iowa Ornithologists' Union | MS 166 |
| Box |
33 |
| Folder |
31 |
| Contributing Institution |
Iowa State University Library Special Collections and University Archives |
| Creator / Author |
Van Dyk, John, 1936- |
| Contributors |
|
| Topics |
Birds--Identification Ornithology Rare birds |
| Birds |
Golden Eagle |
| Locations |
Oak Grove State Park |
| Map |
|
| Verbatim Locality |
Oak Grove Park area in western Sioux County |
| Location Remarks |
The documentation forms do not include georeferences |
| Habitat |
|
| Extent |
1 page |
| Language(s) |
eng |
| Bibliographic Citation |
|
| Information Withheld |
|
| Individual Count |
1 |
| Occurrence Remarks |
The documentation form by John Van Dyk is the only one submitted and forms the basis of this record. | The original documentation form event lasted from 10:00:00/10:45:00. |
| Occurrence Status |
present |
| Field Number |
|
| Event Remarks |
Viewing Conditions: 9x25 binoculars. The distance was approximately one-fifth of a mile, however, so the view was not clear. I ran back to my car to get my balscope and tripod. The bird was still there when I got my scope out and set up. The sun was behind me, so when I got the bird in my scope it was easy to see that I was looking at a golden-maned Golden Eagle. |
| Supporting Documentation |
|
| Date Digital |
05 Dec 2017 |
| File Type |
image/jpeg |
| Hardware / Software |
Epson - sheet feed |