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  2. Idaho Department of Fish and Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idaho_Department_of_Fish...

    The Fish and Game Department understood that beavers help with the wetlands, they helped reduce erosion, and they create habitat for birds and fish, so they decided to move the animals. The department trapped 76 beavers that were parachuted into the meadows of Central Idaho. [6] In 1949 the operation was deemed successful after officials ...

  3. Frank Church–River of No Return Wilderness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Church–River_of_No...

    Frank Church–River of No Return Wilderness

  4. Beaver drop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaver_drop

    Beaver drop. The beaver drop was a 1948 Idaho Department of Fish and Game program to relocate beavers from Northwestern Idaho to the Chamberlain Basin in Central Idaho. The program involved moving 76 beavers by airplane and parachuting them down to the ground. The program was started to address complaints about property damage from residents.

  5. Idaho stop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idaho_stop

    Idaho stop. The Idaho stop is the common name for laws that allow bicyclists to treat a stop sign as a yield sign, and a red light as a stop sign. [1] It first became law in Idaho in 1982, but was not adopted elsewhere until Delaware adopted a limited stop-as-yield law, the "Delaware Yield", in 2017. [2] Arkansas was the second US state to ...

  6. United States Fish and Wildlife Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Fish_and...

    United States Fish and Wildlife Service

  7. Lochsa River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lochsa_River

    P.L. 90-542. The Lochsa River is in the northwestern United States, in the mountains of north central Idaho. It is one of two primary tributaries (with the Selway to the south) of the Middle Fork of the Clearwater River in the Clearwater National Forest. Lochsa is a Nez Perce word meaning rough water. [6][7] The Salish name is Ep Smɫí, "It ...

  8. Teton River (Idaho) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teton_River_(Idaho)

    11,000 cu ft/s (310 m 3 /s) [6] The Teton River is a 64-mile-long (103 km) [2] tributary of the Henrys Fork of the Snake River in southeastern Idaho in the United States. It drains through the Teton Valley along the west side of the Teton Range along the Idaho- Wyoming border at the eastern end of the Snake River Plain.

  9. Camas prairie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camas_prairie

    Although they once covered a significantly larger area, they cover about 26 km 2 (10 sq mi) of the Camas prairie basin. The wavelength of these dunes and antidunes ranges from 90 to 951 m (295 to 3,120 ft) and their height ranges from 0.3–17 m (0.98–55.77 ft). They are all two-dimensional, flow transverse, sinuous, sedimentary bedforms. The ...