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Pere David's Deer in a deer park in England
Deer amongst the nature in Royal Windsor great park
deers at a forest in the german muensterland
Deer grazing  in forest in summer
Bushy Park - Spring 2020
Pere David's Deer in Woburn Abbey Deer Park, England
Stag attempting to get the the leaves from the tree
Deer at the ‘Hertenkamp’ in Delft, during sunset
Deer at Wentworth Woodhouse, Wentworth, Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom\n\nWentworth Woodhouse is home to a small herd of beautiful Fallow deer as well as a much larger herd of red deer that roam the wider parkland.
footpath daffodils spring wild flowers walking hiking
Herd of Fallow Deer (Dama dama), grazing, relaxing during the July 2016 British, mini heatwave. Near Powderham, Exeter, England
The fallow deer (Dama dama) is a species of ruminant mammal belonging to the family Cervidae. It is native to Europe, but has been introduced around the world.\nHistory:\nThe fallow deer was native to most of Europe during the last interglacial. In the Pleistocene (the last ice age) the distribution was restricted to the Middle East and refugia in parts of the Mediterranean Basin: Sicily, Anatolia and the Balkan. Pleistocene fallow deer were larger, extant populations have evolved into smaller animals. Humans began to expand the distribution of this deer in the last two millennia by introducing it throughout Europe and further afield. In the Levant, fallow deer were an important source of meat in Palaeolithic cultures (420,000–200,000 BCE), as is shown by bones, also used for conserving the marrow to be eaten weeks after the kill, found in the Qesem cave, but the species appears to have disappeared from the southern Levant in the following Epipalaeolithic Natufian culture, 13,000–7,500 BCE, although gazelle and especially roe deer proliferated, perhaps because of climate change (increased aridity and the decrease of wooded areas), in combination with changing land use patterns and hunting pressure. At the same time the taxon persisted in the north in the Galilee region and the north of the West Bank (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made at a Nature Reserve in North Holland (the Netherlands).
Red deer stag bellowing to ward off other stags coming for his hinds during the rutting season
Close up of a red deer stag lying down in a field of grass
The doe bellows in the moonlight\nAnd cry until your eyes melt:\nHer delicious little fawn\nDisappeared into the dark night.\n\nTo tell his misfortune\nIn the forest of his ancestors,\nThe doe bellows in the moonlight\nAnd cry until your eyes melt.\n\nBut no answer, none,\nTo his long anxious calls!\nAnd, with his neck stretched towards the heavens,\nMad with love and resentment,\nThe doe bellows in the moonlight.
Deer grazing in a field in Scandinavia
A herd of deer at Windsor Great Park
Deer in the New Forest in 1976, on old camera film
Deer Park beautiful
The fallow deer (Dama dama) is a species of ruminant mammal belonging to the family Cervidae. It is native to Europe, but has been introduced around the world.\nHistory:\nThe fallow deer was native to most of Europe during the last interglacial. In the Pleistocene (the last ice age) the distribution was restricted to the Middle East and refugia in parts of the Mediterranean Basin: Sicily, Anatolia and the Balkan. Pleistocene fallow deer were larger, extant populations have evolved into smaller animals. Humans began to expand the distribution of this deer in the last two millennia by introducing it throughout Europe and further afield. In the Levant, fallow deer were an important source of meat in Palaeolithic cultures (420,000–200,000 BCE), as is shown by bones, also used for conserving the marrow to be eaten weeks after the kill, found in the Qesem cave, but the species appears to have disappeared from the southern Levant in the following Epipalaeolithic Natufian culture, 13,000–7,500 BCE, although gazelle and especially roe deer proliferated, perhaps because of climate change (increased aridity and the decrease of wooded areas), in combination with changing land use patterns and hunting pressure. At the same time the taxon persisted in the north in the Galilee region and the north of the West Bank (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made at a Wild Park on the Veluwe, Gelderland (the Netherlands).
many deers in a german forest
Young deer (fawns) in Richmond Park london.
irish deers and does eating grass in a garden
Pere David's Deer in Woburn Abbey Deer Park, England
Deer on a roadway in the middle of summer foraging for food
A Fallow Deer (Dama dama) in a meadow in Scotland during summer
Two red deer lying in summer one behind the other in the tall grass
Wild deer in the UK in 1995, on old film stock.
Fallow deers, with white spots across their body, in Wollaton Park, up close
A red deer female accompanied by her youngster feeding on grass along the edge of a lake
Free Images: "bestof:Charlecote Park, Warwickshire, Deer in the Hill Park Explore barry.marsh1944's 1719 photos on Flickr!"
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