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Louisiana - Nature and Scientific Wonders

  • By Smithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian.com, November 08, 2007, Subscribe
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The Global Wildlife Center in Folsom is home to more than 3000 exotic and endangered animals. The Global Wildlife Center in Folsom is home to more than 3,000 exotic and endangered animals.

Courtesy of the Louisiana Office of Tourism

 
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    The ELsong Gardens at the Biedenharn Museum & Gardens in Monroe.

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    American painter and ornithologist John James Audubon spent much of his life in Louisiana, and New Orleans’ Audubon Nature Institute was founded in his honor. Its museums, parks, zoo, insectarium and aquarium display a diverse array of wildlife, and its researchers work to conserve Louisiana’s natural environment.

    Kisatchie National Forest, home to bears, possums, alligators, birds and many other animals, covers 604,000 acres in Northern and Central Louisiana. Hiking trails and bridle paths run through old-growth pine forests, and a canoe trip through the bald-cypress bayous reveals a Louisiana untouched by civilization.


    American painter and ornithologist John James Audubon spent much of his life in Louisiana, and New Orleans’ Audubon Nature Institute was founded in his honor. Its museums, parks, zoo, insectarium and aquarium display a diverse array of wildlife, and its researchers work to conserve Louisiana’s natural environment.

    Kisatchie National Forest, home to bears, possums, alligators, birds and many other animals, covers 604,000 acres in Northern and Central Louisiana. Hiking trails and bridle paths run through old-growth pine forests, and a canoe trip through the bald-cypress bayous reveals a Louisiana untouched by civilization.

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