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  1. Bernard's wolf. Bernard's wolf ( Canis lupus bernardi ), also known as the Banks Island wolf or the Banks Island tundra wolf, [2] is an extinct subspecies of the gray wolf that was limited to Banks and Victoria Island of the Arctic Archipelago. [3]

  2. The wolf was described as "white with black-tipped hair along the ridge of the back". It was formally discovered, classified, and named after Peter Bernard and Joseph F. Bernard, his nephew, after an adult male skin and skull was collected by them and brought to the National Museum of Canada. There were very few specimens of the subspecies that ...

  3. The Bernard's wolf ( Canis lupus bernardi) also known as Victoria Island wolf or Banks Island wolf is a subspecies of the grey wolf. This canid was identified in 1943 by zoologist John Anderson. The skin and skull of an adult male had been brought back by Pierre Bernard, hence the name "Bernardi" in Latin. Common name: Bernard's wolf.

  4. Bernard's wolf (Canis lupus bernardi), also known as the Banks Island wolf or the Banks Island tundra wolf, is an extinct subspecies of the gray wolf that was limited to Banks and Victoria Island of the Arctic Archipelago. Taxonomy. It is recognized as a subspecies of Canis lupus in the taxonomic authority Mammal Species of the World (2005).

  5. Bernard Wolf, a prominent merchant and civic leader who successfully challenged racial covenants in Canada, has died in London, Ontario at the age of 96. He had been the first president of the ...

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  7. It was not until 1943 that zoologist Rudolph Martin Anderson identified the Bernard's Wolf, also known as the Banks Island Wolf, as the subspecies Canis lupus bernardi. An adult male skin and skull of the wolf at the National Museum of Canada had been collected by Peter Bernard. The wolf was named after hunter/explorer/fur trader Peter Bernard ...

  8. Bernard "Berny" Wolf was an American animator and television producer. Wolf was born in New York City. His career in animation started in 1924, when he began work as an inker on Paramount Studios' Krazy Kat silent shorts. He moved to Fleischer Studios shortly afterward, providing artwork for both the Koko the Clown and Betty Boop series. It was at Fleischer Studios that he met Shamus Culhane ...

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