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OK, I will test your patience with some scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for many weeks at least with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have. Between 1987 and 2005 I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throateed Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I have descriptions of the display and courtship of this male bird we witnessed, but the camera gear I had and dark situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slides are all I have and they are cropped significantly.
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Bumblebee Hummingbird. Oaxaca, Mexico. Copyright 2009 Peter R. Bono.
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Summary[
edit] Description: Italiano: Coppia di Colibrì bombo (Atthis heloisa), la femmina è in alto e il maschio in basso. Date: 9 May 2019, 00:37:22. Source: A Monograph of the Trochilidae Volume 3. Author: John Gould. Licensing[
edit] This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional,
public domain work of art. The work of art itself is in the public domain for the following reason: Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse. : This work is in the
public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the
copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer. You must also include a
United States public domain tag to indicate why this work is in the public domain in the United States.
This file has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights.. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/PDMCreative Commons Public Domain Mark 1.0falsefalse The official position taken by the Wikimedia Foundation is that "faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain".This photographic reproduction is therefore also considered to be in the public domain in the United States. In other jurisdictions, re-use of this content may be restricted; see
Reuse of PD-Art photographs for details.
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Daniel Germer|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/170936225@N07/46686808955%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200814114606/https://www.flickr.com/photos/170936225@N07/46686808955%7Creviewdate=2019-08-16 02:49:08|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
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OK, I will test your patience with some scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for many weeks at least with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have. Between 1987 and 2005 I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throateed Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I have descriptions of the display and courtship of this male bird we witnessed, but the camera gear I had and dark situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slides are all I have and they are cropped significantly.
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OK, I will test your patience with some scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for many weeks at least with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have. Between 1987 and 2005 I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throateed Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I have descriptions of the display and courtship of this male bird we witnessed, but the camera gear I had and dark situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slides are all I have and they are cropped significantly.
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OK, I will test your patience with some scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for many weeks at least with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have. Between 1987 and 2005 I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throateed Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I have descriptions of the display and courtship of this male bird we witnessed, but the camera gear I had and dark situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slides are all I have and they are cropped significantly.
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Between 1987 and 2005, I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throated Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I recorded we saw 4 different individuals of this species. The camera gear I had and dark cloud forest situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slide scans are all I have and they are cropped significantly. I am posting scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for a while with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. There has been considerable color shift in many of these slides over the years, unfortunately. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have.
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Between 1987 and 2005, I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throated Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I recorded we saw 4 different individuals of this species. The camera gear I had and dark cloud forest situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slide scans are all I have and they are cropped significantly. I am posting scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for a while with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. There has been considerable color shift in many of these slides over the years, unfortunately. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have.
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Between 1987 and 2005, I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throated Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I recorded we saw 4 different individuals of this species. The camera gear I had and dark cloud forest situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slide scans are all I have and they are cropped significantly. I am posting scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for a while with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. There has been considerable color shift in many of these slides over the years, unfortunately. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have.
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Between 1987 and 2005, I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throated Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I recorded we saw 4 different individuals of this species. The camera gear I had and dark cloud forest situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slide scans are all I have and they are cropped significantly. I am posting scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for a while with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. There has been considerable color shift in many of these slides over the years, unfortunately. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have.
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Between 1987 and 2005, I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throated Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I recorded we saw 4 different individuals of this species. The camera gear I had and dark cloud forest situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slide scans are all I have and they are cropped significantly. I am posting scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for a while with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. There has been considerable color shift in many of these slides over the years, unfortunately. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have.
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Between 1987 and 2005, I led more that a dozen trips to the El Triunfo Cloud Forest in Chiapas in search of Horned Guan and other species. One of the birds we always looked for was Wine-throated Hummingbird. In my field notes for this day I recorded we saw 4 different individuals of this species. The camera gear I had and dark cloud forest situation made photography of this tiny bird quite a challenge. These slide scans are all I have and they are cropped significantly. I am posting scans of some old, marginal 35 mm slides. gcwarbler had retained many boxes of some of my culled slides from 20-30 years ago. I have enough to keep me busy for a while with scanning, etc. (thanks Chuckâ¦.I think!). These will all be of records I had not posted to iNat previously. There has been considerable color shift in many of these slides over the years, unfortunately. Sorry for the marginal/poor quality of most of these but they are all I have.