Animals
Mostly Geysers
Deserts
Other Mammals
Animals that live close or in the Pacific Ocean
100
? is the largest cat in the Western Hemisphere.
Mountain Lion
100
? National Park is the oldest national park in the world.
Yellowstone
100
? ? Desert is a vast, arid region that spreads into eleven states and parts of Mexico.
North American
100
? is a wild member of the dog family.
Coyote
100
? ?, which may be almost 50 feet long, pass through the kelp beds each year.
Gray Whales
200
? is the wild sheep of North America.
Bighorn
200
? ? is the most famous geyser.
Old Faithful
200
? ? Desert is the largest desert area in the United States.
Great Basin
200
Seventeen kids of ? live in caves or near the desert.
Bats
200
? live along the coasts of all the continents and most of them live in the Northern Hemisphere.
Seals
300
? is the most dangerous animal of North America.
Grizzly Bear
300
? Geyser is the largest geyser in the world.
Steamboat
300
? Desert, an arid section of Nevada and California covers 25,000 square miles.
Mojave
300
?, which look like large house-cats with shrubby tails, live in the mountains and plains as well as in the deserts.
Bobcats
300
? ? has the greatest wingspan of any bird.
Wandering Albatross
400
? is the fat little farmer of the mountain slopes.
Pika
400
? ? ? has beautiful terraces of limestone.
Mammoth Hot Springs
400
? Desert is in western Mexico, southern California, and Arizona.
Sonoran
400
? are members of the racoon family.
Cacomistles
400
? ? is similar to a tern and is also another familiar bird along the Pacific shores.
California Gull
500
? usually makes its nest behind a waterfall.
Dipper
500
? Lake is the largest high-altitude lake in North America.
Yellowstone
500
? Desert lies partly in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.
Chihuahuan
500
? ? is a pig-like animal that wanders in bands through the desert and scrub-lands looking cacti and roots to eat.
Collared Peccary
500
At least five kinds of ? live in the North Pacific Ocean.
Salmon
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