UW Home AHC Home
Search Our Catalog & Archives   |  Online Collections  |   Home
About the AHC    |    Search/Site Map    |    News & Events    |    Store    |    Education & Outreach    |    Features    |    FAQ    |    Give to the AHC

Virtual Exhibits

Audio-Visual Collections

Manuscript Collections

UW Digital Initiative

 
AHC Home
American Heritage Center
University of Wyoming

Mailing Address:
Dept. 3924
1000 E. University Avenue
Laramie, WY 82071
307.766.4114
ahc@uwyo.edu
 

More Pronghorn than People Exhibit
 
 
Exhibit Home Page
 
     
The pronghorn -- fastest animal in North
The pronghorn -- fastest animal in North
America, undated (AHC Collections)
  A lone hunter scouts out prime pronghorn country, ca. 1953
A lone hunter scouts out prime pronghorn country, ca. 1953 (Warren Page Papers, AHC)
     
The pronghorn is often referred to as an antelope. Though similar to an antelope that might be seen on the plains of Africa, the pronghorn is not an antelope at all. The pronghorn belongs to the family Antilocapridae, a family that evolved about 35 million years ago and is unique to North America. So why isn’t the pronghorn an antelope? The pronghorn is the only mammal that has hollow branched horns that are shed and renewed annually.

 

 

 
     
Exhibit Home Page  
 
Search Our Catalog & Archives | Online Collections | About AHC | Site Map | News & Events | Store | Education & Outreach | Features | FAQ | Give to the AHC | Home