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A fossil from the Miocene Epoch, some ten million years ago, was found to be structurally the same as the modern sandhill crane. Today, these large birds are found predominately in North America.
The first sandhill crane that Rob Koelling, a Powell birding photographer, spotted this year appeared in late February, ...
Today, sixty years later, I am excited to have once again visited central Nebraska in March for the sandhill crane migration.
A KETV producer recently went to central Nebraska to see the sandhill crane migration.Matt Brown shared video of his experience in Gibbon at the Iain Nicolson Audubon Center at Rowe Sanctuary ...
After more than 1,500 of the lanky birds died in Indiana, wildlife biologists in Nebraska were on high alert for the ...
Long legs drifting below a pair of giant-winged birds, like silken threads caught in a gentle breeze, glide overhead. Their timeless journey celebrating spring’s arrival. I listen for an ancient avian ...
Now, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources is once again asking volunteers to venture out and help count sandhill crane in certain parts of the Buckeye State. According to experts, the tall ...
Arrivals and departures are staggered over several weeks, but at peak stopover, it's one of the great sights of natural ...
The sandhill crane population in Ohio appears to be increasing. Last year, 412 sandhill cranes were counted in Ohio, up from 357 the previous year. This year's crane count will take place this ...
Rowe Sanctuary Center Director Marcos Stoltzfus, in an exclusive interview with the Observer, shared his expert knowledge of the Sandhill Cranes and their migration through Nebraska. He described it ...