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Anonymous. (1903). The Snow Leopard. Zoological Society Bulletin, Oct, 109.
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Anonymous. (1999). Snow Leopard Undergoes Hip Replacement Surgery. Feline-Practice, 27(4), 5.
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Fox, J. L. (1997). Rangeland management and wildlife conservation in the HKH. In D.J.Miller, & S.R.Craig (Eds.), (pp. 53–57).
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Chundawat, R. S. (1993). Studies on Snow Leopard and Prey Species in Hemis National Park (Vol. xi). Seattle: Islt.
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Anandakrishnan, M. B. (1998). The snow leopard: Elusive and endangered. The Environmental Magazine, 9(5), 18–19.
Abstract: The snow leopard has never been common, but there may be fewer than 4,000 left in its Himalayan habitat, and poaching and tourism-related development in the region could drive its numbers down further.
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Jackson, R., & Ahlborn, G. (1986). Himalayan snow leopard project: final progress report, phase 1.
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Schaller, G. B. (1980). Stones of Silence: Journeys in the Himalaya. New York: Viking Press.
Abstract: Anecdotal description of wildlife field studies in the Himalaya, including information on snow leopard natural history and an encounter with snow leopards in Pakistan.
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Fox, J. L., Sinya, S. P., Chundawat, R. S., & Das, P. K. (1986). A Survey of Snow Leopard and Associated Species in the Himalaya of Northwestern India, Project Completion Report.
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Stockley, G. (1936). Stalking in the Himalayas and Northern India. London: Herbert Jenkins.
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Green, M. J. B. (1992). Nature Reserves of the Himalaya and the Mountains of Central Asia. New Delhi: IUCN, Cambridge and Oxford University Press.
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