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Hot Damn! It's the Loveland Frog!

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Hot Damn! It's the Loveland Frog! is an American bluegrass musical comedy produced by actors and playwrights Joshua Steele and Mike Hall[1]. The story follows the disappearance of an old man in Loveland, Ohio, raising once again tales of a cryptozoological anthropormophic amphibian known as the Loveland Frog.

The musical premiered at the Art Academy of Cincinnati during the 2014 Cincinnati Fringe Festival[2].

References[edit]

  1. Lee, Marika. "'Loveland Frogman' gets own musical". The Enquirer. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  2. "Weirdly Beloved Local Monster Legend Takes the Stage in New Bluegrass Musical". Behind the Curtain Cincinnati. 2014-05-14. Retrieved 2023-10-16.



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Graham S. Cowles DE link

Graham Stewart Cowles (born 1931) is a British ornithologist and paleornithologist.

Life[edit]

January 1949, Cowles joined the bird department of the Natural History Museum in London as an assistant. He then served in the British Armed Forces for 2 years from January 1950[1]. In 1961 he accompanied Peter Colston on an expedition to Andalusia[2] and from 1962 to 1963 and 1965, Cowles joined expeditions to Australia, financed by Australian zoologist and philanthropist Harold Wesley Hall (1888–1964)[3]. From 1971, Cowles transferred the bird collections to the Natural History Museum at Tring where they were curated and supervised by Colston and Cowles. In January 1977 he was appointed Senior Scientific Officer and after I.C.J. Galbraith retired in 1985, Cowles became head curator of the bird collection until his own retirement at the end of June 1991[1].

Cowles described the Hall's babbler (Pomatostomus halli) in 1964 and the subspecies of the Collared Kingfisher[4] (Halcyon chloris) in 1980. In 1994, Cowles described the Réunion sheldgoose[5] (Alopochen kervazoi) and the Réunion kestrel (Falco duboisi) after extensive research on subfossil bird species of the Mascarene Islands in 1987 and in chapter 2-The Fossil Record in the work Studies of Mascarene Island Birds.

In 1974, Cowles participated in an expedition of the British Ornithologists' Union to Réunion island. During study of the Vergoz caverns near La-Saline-les-Bains and a coastal cave near Saint-Paul, he collected fragments of the extinct turtle species Saddle-backed Mauritius giant tortoise(Cylindraspis inepta).

Graham published the book Birds (Instructions for Collectors) in 1970 in collaboration with Colin James Oliver Harrison (1926–2003)[6]. In 1974, Cowles wrote the chapter Timaliidae – Quail-thrushes & Babblers in Pat Halls book Birds of the Harold Hall Australian Expeditions 1962–1970[7].

Dedication names[edit]

Julian P. Hume named the Rodrigues bulbul (Hypsipetes cowlesi) in honour of Graham S. Cowles in 2015[8]

Categories[edit]


This article "Hot Damn! It's the Loveland Frog!" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Hot Damn! It's the Loveland Frog!. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Cowles, Graham S: Papers and Correspondence". www.nhm.ac.uk. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  2. "NHM Archive, Sims; Reginald William (1926-2012)". www.nhm.ac.uk. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  3. "Harold Hall Australian expeditions", Wikipedia, 2022-06-03, retrieved 2023-11-06
  4. British Ornithologists' Club.; Club, British Ornithologists' (1980). Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. v.100 (1980). London: British Ornithologists' Club. Search this book on
  5. "Bulletin 13 - March 1981: A New Subspecies of Kingfisher". enhg.org. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  6. Harrison, Colin James Oliver; Cowles, G. S. (1970). Birds. Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History). ISBN 978-0-565-00561-0. Search this book on
  7. Hall, B. P.; Hall, B. P.; Expeditions, Harold Hall Australian (1974). Birds of the Harold Hall Australian Expeditions, 1962-1970 : a report on the collections made for the British Museum (Natural History). London: Trustees of the British Museum. Search this book on
  8. Hume, Julian P. (4 October 2015). "A new subfossil bulbul (Aves: Passerines: Pycnonotidae) from Rodrigues Island, Mascarenes, south-western Indian Ocean". Retrieved 6 November 2023.