Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pryor_Mountains_Wild_Horse_Range an entity of type: Thing

The Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range is a refuge for a historically significant herd of free-roaming mustangs, the Pryor Mountain mustang, feral horses colloquially called "wild horses", located in the Pryor Mountains of Montana and Wyoming in the United States. The range has an area of 39,650 acres (160.5 km2) and was established in 1968 along the Montana–Wyoming border as the first protected refuge dedicated exclusively for mustangs. It was the second feral horse refuge in the United States. About a quarter of the refuge lies within the Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area. A group of federal agencies, led by the Bureau of Land Management, administers the range. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range
rdf:langString Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range
rdf:langString Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range
xsd:float 45.0533332824707
xsd:float -108.3225021362305
xsd:integer 32029829
xsd:integer 1034712706
xsd:date 1968-09-09
rdf:langString IV
rdf:langString Carbon County, Montana, and Big Horn County, Wyoming, United States
rdf:langString Billings, Montana
xsd:integer 1
xsd:string 45.053333333333335 -108.3225
rdf:langString The Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range is a refuge for a historically significant herd of free-roaming mustangs, the Pryor Mountain mustang, feral horses colloquially called "wild horses", located in the Pryor Mountains of Montana and Wyoming in the United States. The range has an area of 39,650 acres (160.5 km2) and was established in 1968 along the Montana–Wyoming border as the first protected refuge dedicated exclusively for mustangs. It was the second feral horse refuge in the United States. About a quarter of the refuge lies within the Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area. A group of federal agencies, led by the Bureau of Land Management, administers the range. Because of the unique genetic makeup of the Pryor Mountain mustang herd, equine geneticist Dr. E. Gus Cothran concluded in 1992 that "the Pryor herd may be the most significant wild-horse herd remaining in the United States." Dr. D. Phillip Sponenberg, equine veterinarian at Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine, agreed, noting, "[These animals] don't exist anywhere else."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 66026
xsd:double 160457857.14816
xsd:string IV
<Geometry> POINT(-108.32250213623 45.053333282471)

data from the linked data cloud