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  2. Mineral lick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_lick

    A mineral lick (also known as a salt lick) is a place where animals can go to lick essential mineral nutrients from a deposit of salts and other minerals. Mineral licks can be naturally occurring or artificial (such as blocks of salt that farmers place in pastures for livestock to lick).

  3. Deer hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_hunting

    This is often done with corn or a mineral block, such as a salt-lick, and where the hunter sits perched in a higher elevation some distance away, awaiting the deer's visit. [10] If this were done at night, a miner's acetylene lamp, or an electric spotlight, was placed near the mineral block so as to see the animal when it approaches. Another ...

  4. Horse (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_(geology)

    The horse is the broad lens-shaped feature in the rock defined by the splitting and rejoining of the trace of the fault plane. A horse, in geology, is any block of rock completely separated from the surrounding rock either by mineral veins or fault planes. In mining, a horse is a block of country rock entirely encased within a mineral lode. [1]

  5. White-tailed deer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-tailed_deer

    Male O. v. nelsoni with antlers in velvet. The white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), also known commonly as the whitetail and the Virginia deer, is a medium-sized species of deer native to North America, Central America, and South America as far south as Peru and Bolivia, where it predominately inhabits high mountain terrains of the Andes. [3]

  6. Equine nutrition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_nutrition

    A pelleted or extruded horse ration contains grain and other plant products, plus vitamin and mineral supplements. Most horses only need quality forage, water, and a salt or mineral block. [13] Grain or other concentrates are often not necessary. [5] But, when grain or other concentrates are fed, quantities must be carefully monitored.

  7. An Introduction to the Rock-Forming Minerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_introduction_to_the...

    Introduction to the Rock-forming Minerals is a condensed version of the multi-volume work Rock-forming Minerals by the same authors, which was published in 1962-3 with a second edition beginning in 1978, totalling 11 volumes. The condensed version omits some references, etymology, and chemical analysis present in the larger work.

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