 
Glacier National Park is also remarkable in that every type of wildlife that was native to the Park before the coming of Europeans is alive and well in this still largely pristine place. That includes a full range of carnivores such as bobcat, lynx, mountain lion, raccoon, black bear, grizzly bear, red fox, coyote, wolf, river otter, badger and wolverine. Prey animals for these carnivores include snowshoe hare, jackrabbit, rodents of all stripes and more, as well as many of the larger hoofed animals. Of these hoofed animals, the most prominent residents are: pronghorn antelope, moose, white-tailed deer, American elk, caribou, bison, the sure-footed mountain goat and bighorn sheep with their distinctive curving horns. Birdlife is equally plentiful. The Park is a veritable Noah's Ark, and it is a small wonder that Native Americans of long ago considered it a cornucopia of everything a human being could possible need for sustenance.
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