Results 211 to 220 of about 324,956 (256)
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Application of wild goats in cashmere breeding

Small Ruminant Research, 1995
The Xinjiang goat had a lower cashmere weight (137 g), shorter cashmere length (5.0 cm), but finer cashmere diameter (12.74 μm) than other types. If graded up with the Liaoning cashmere goat to the 2nd generation, cashmere weights were 320 g and 300 g for yearling bucks and yearling does, respectively, cashmere length was 7.0 cm and cashmere diameter ...
M. Yerxat, null Yalejean
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Type A Enterotoxemia in Captive Wild Goats

Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1970
SUMMARY This report relates the death loss of 20% of a herd of captive wild goats (Capra ibex sibericus) associated with Clostridium perfringens, type A enterotoxemia. All illnesses were diagnosed at necropsy. A rich diet and adverse weather conditions were thought to be predisposing factors.
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A CARIAN WILD GOAT WORKSHOP

Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 1993
Summary: A number of Carian pots from the neighbourhood of Mylasa are attributed to one painter and his workshop. Their decoration is in a Wild Goat style and, presumably later, a Fikellura style. Their date therefore can hardly be earlier than the second quarter of the sixth century.
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The Wild Goat’s Kid

1999
Her nimble hoofs made music on the crags all winter, as she roamed along the cliff-tops over the sea.
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DIGESTIVE EFFICIENCY IN A WILD GOAT: THE NUBIAN IBEX

Canadian Journal of Animal Science, 1984
The ibex (Capra ibex nubiana) is a wild goat indigenous to the extreme desert area adjacent to the Red Sea. The animals' capacity to cope with adverse nutritional conditions was tested on feeds of different quality and was compared to that of other breeds of goats.
I. CHOSHNIAK, H. ARNON, A. SHKOLNIK
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Besnoitiosis in wild and domestic goats in Iran.

The Cornell veterinarian, 1979
Besnoitia cysts and lesions were observed in the skin, blood vessels, epididymis and testes of two wild goats (Capra aegagrus) and in the subcutaneous tissues of two domestic goats (Capra hircus) in the Fars Province of Iran. The seminiferous tubules in the wild goats showed aspermatogenesis, degeneration and atrophy of germinal epithelium.
A H, Cheema, F, Toofanian
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THE WILD GOAT and FIKELLURA STYLES: SOME SPECULATIONS

Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 1992
Summary: It is suggested that the Wild Goat style began and was formed at Miletus and later was adopted with variations by other East Greek cities, and that when around 600 BC the North Ionian school developed a successful incising style, the old style persisted elsewhere, probably till the advent of Fikellura about 560 BC.
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StudyCapture myopathy in red deer and wild goat

2011
This syndrome is a shock-like hyper metabolic myopathy triggered in susceptible animals by stress. Capture myopathy (C.M.) is a commonly occurring condition in mammals following trapping and transportation. In this case 12 to 24 hours after transportation of red deer (Cevus elaphus) and wild goats (Capra ibex) clinical signs such as: muscular tremor,
Mirian, J., Alhami, A., Hamidieh, H.
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The Wild Goats Of Lebanon: Evidence For Early Domestication?

Levant, 2001
Abstract This article discusses the biogeography of Persian wild goat in an attempt to identify the most likely early centres of goat domestication in the Levant. It is suggested that Persian wild goat may have been first domesticated in or immediately adjacent to the Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon mountains during the mid-tenth millennium BP (uncalibrated),
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THE ‘WILD’ GOATS OF ANCIENT CRETE:

2021
Valasia ISAAKIDOU, Paul HALSTEAD
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