1279.10.11.12.13.14.caves or cave-like situations: Myotis t. thysanodes from"cavelike fissures in a low hill of vOlcanIc rock" nearLa Pila; Myotis v. velifer from a "large, but shallowcave" on TIle Rancho Las Margaritas, south and west ofVicente, Guerrero; Plecotus townsendii australis from alimestone cave north of Campana, known locally as Cuevade los Indios; and Antrozus pallidus pallidus from Cuevade los Indios and other caves.Carter, Dil<strong>for</strong>d C., Ronald H. Pine, and William B. Davis. 1966."Notes on Middle American bats." Southwestern Nat., 11(4):488-499.This report includes a record of Myotis thysanodes aztecusMiller and Allen from the entrance of a limestone cave7 mi southeast of San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas.It is a first record <strong>for</strong> this species in Chiapas.Cockrum, E. Lendell. 1960. "Distribution, habitat and habitsof the mastiff bat, Eumots perotis, in North America. 1IJ. Arizona Acad. Sci., 1 3):79=84.This study of the mastiff bat includes a record of aS~ll of ECO~ lerotis in IIIndian <strong>Cave</strong>ll, near CuatroCienegas, oa ui a, Mexico.Cockrum, E. Lendell, and Gordon van R. Bradshaw. 1963."Notes on mammals from Sonora, Mexico." Amer. Mus. Nov.,2138. 9pp.This account of mammals in the state of Sonora includesrecords of the following bats in Cueva del Tigre, 14.9mi. SSE Carbo: Chilonycteris parnelli mexicana, pteronotusdavyi fUlvus, Mormoops m. megalophylla, LePton~cterisnivalis sanborni, Natalus stramineus mexicanus, anTadarida brasiliensIs mexicana.Constantine, Denny G. 1958. "An automatic bat-collectingdevice. 1I J. Wildlife Management, 22(1):17-22.This account of a new bat-collecting device includesreference to the capture of eight species of bat in acave near Valles, San Luis Potosi.Davis, Wayne H. 1959. "Taxonomy of the eastern pipistrel. 1IJ. Mammal., 40(4):521-531.This taxonomic revision of the bat species, Pi~istrellussubflavus, includes P. subflavus veraecrucis ( ard) froma II cave 'Close by tEe hamlet of Las Vigas,' Canton ofJalapa, Veracruz, Mexico. 1Ide la Torre, Luis. 1955. IlBats from Guerrero, Jalisco andOaxaca, Mexico. 1I Fieldiana: Zool., 37:695-701, pl. 30-31.This report on <strong>Mexican</strong> bats includes records of Balantiopteryx~. !licata Peters, Chilonycteris rubiginosamexicana Mi 1er, Chilonycter1s ps110t1s Dobson, pteronotusdavyi fulvus TKomas, Mormoops m. megalophylla Peters,Glossophaga soricina leachi Gary, and Desmodus rotundusmurinus Wagner from a cave 5 miles northwest of Acapulco,
128Guerreroj of Balantiopteryx £. p1icata Peters from a caveat Tehuantepec, Oaxacaj and of Balantiopteryx £. plicataPeters and Leptontcteris niva1is nivalls Saussure from acave 12 miles sou h of Mexcala, Guerrero.15. Ingles, Lloyd G. 1958. "Notas acerca de los mamiferos<strong>Mexican</strong>os. 1I Anal. Inst. BioI., 29(1-2):379-408.This report on <strong>Mexican</strong> mammals includes records ofBalantiopteryx plicata in caves at Manzanil10, Colima,and near San~las, Nayaritj of Glossophaga soricina in acave near San BIas, Nayaritj of Artibeus jarnaicensis ina cave near Chochola, Yucatanj and of Desmodus rotundusin a cenote at Chichen-Itz~, Yucatan, and in a cave 7.5krn. SE Mitla, Oaxaca. Other bat records include specimenstaken in abandoned mines.16. Long, Charles A., and Carolyn J. Jones. 1966. IIVariation andfrequency of occurrence of the baculum in a popUlation of<strong>Mexican</strong> free-tailed bats. 1I Southwestern Nat., 11(2):290-295.The baculum is studied in bats, Tadarida brasiliensismexicana, taken from a cave at Cofre de Perote, 9200 feetelevation, Veracruz.17. Ward, Henry L. 1891. "Descriptions of three new species of<strong>Mexican</strong> bats. 1I Amer. Nat., 25:743-753.A new species of bat, Vesperugo veraecrucis (=Pipistrellussubflavus veraecrucis), is described from a cave near LasVegas, Jalapa, Veracruz. In addition ves)ertilio (=~otiS)velifer and Plecotus macrotis (~exicanus are repor edfrom this cave, which is brielfy described.
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THE ASSOCIATION FORMEXICAN CAVE STU
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de T1amaya the deepest surveyed cav
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and is about 200 feet long. It is p
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Modesto G6mez Saldivar, 1898-1966Mo
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JOHN WILLIAM FRANCIS HARRISONBORN B
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have been found even at Harrison's
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Note: This is the first of a series
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it has rained three and four inches
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The Deep Caves or the Western Hemis
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Persons: Ed Alexander, Bob Burnett,
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go north of Galeana to Ranchero Sou
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26Persons: Chip Carney and Don Eric
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=::::::?------------I.r-L6-\. MUD S
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Sandy-floored passage in S6tano de
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slopes, made difficult by the thin
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Persons: Faye Chapman I Jonathan Da
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a rutted road. On the other side of
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Entrance to S6tano de San Antonio.
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totENTRANCEo 30FEET60 90iCUEVA DETL
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contained a long, steep talus slope
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Entrance to Cueva del Salitre.Photo
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On July 12 I had an hour's intervie
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THE ASSOCIATION FORMEXICAN CAVE STU
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One of the many Santa Fe dirt sinks
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330 feet. At the bottom along one s
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species of milliped of a group not
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secondary opening one-third of the
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After a perusal of our topo maps th
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HUAUTLA DE JIMENEZ, OAXACAAREA SKET
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11. Pit just down hill from pit 10.
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21. SOTANO DE SAN AGUSTIN - This s6
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LOWERENTRANC.EPROI="ILEuppeR£NTRAN
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RECENT PAPERS ON MEXICAN CAVE BIOLO
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here from Gruta del Palmito, Nuevo
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THE ASSOCIATION FOR MEXICAN CAVE ST
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View north along valley of the Inte
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Typical fissure passages in S6tano
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175large horizontal passage about 1
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177S6tano de Huitzmolotitla, with a
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AreaNorth ofMonterreySouth ofMonter
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182BIOLOGYSECTIONMEXICAN CAVE BEETL
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184from Canada to Oaxaca, but only
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INDEXVOLUME1966II
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187Cantabroniscus primitivus isopod
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189Hooton, Diana 6:149-154Hosley, B
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191pictographs 5:121Pinal de Amo1es
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193from La Si11eta looking eas~)f.