Good morning, Whitewater.
Wednesday will be sunny and mild, with a high of seventy-five.
In America, where do confiscated wildlife and plants go? They go to Denver:
The National Wildlife Property Repository, a government facility outside of Denver, stores more than a million products of the illegal wildlife trade, from tigers and bears to elephant ivory. These items are confiscated at points of entry around the United States, and sent to the Repository to be destroyed or used for educational purposes. The Wildlife Property Repository is a revealing window into the growing global industry of wildlife and plant trafficking, which has been estimated at up to $23 billion.
The facility also houses the National Eagle Repository, which receives and distributes deceased bald and golden eagles to Native Americans around the United States, who use them for religious purposes.
Via The Remote Warehouse Where Confiscated Wildlife Ends Up @ The Atlantic.
Google-a-Day asks a science and business question:
Who founded the company named for the man who invented vulcanized rubber?