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Animals as instruments of Norwegian imperial authority in the interwar Arctic
2016
Journal for the History of Environment and Society
During the first half of the twentieth century a number of individuals in Norway participated in the transfer of animals from both the Arctic to the Antarctic regions and vice versa. These projects may be conceptualized as a form of imperial acclimatization, following in the footsteps of earlier attempts to transplant both plants and animals from their indigenous ranges to new geographic locations for both practical and recreational purposes. Reindeer were introduced to the island of South
doi:10.1484/j.jhes.5.110829
fatcat:3kkxahiefrct3icebc5uvv2bl4