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Gene Jarvis: Barn Owl This haunter of old barns, belfries, hollow trees and caves may well be the best-known owl of all. The Barn Owl is a member of a highly successful family whose roots trace back as far as twenty million years, and its pale, heart-shaped face is familiar in many parts of the world. Chemical pesticides have hurt its numbers in a few urban areas, but the Barn Owl has proved a remarkable survivor. Its unique face makes it easy to remember, and the absolutely silent flight of this night-hunting bird has helped make it a favorite of legend and literature. The Barn Owl is the owl of Gray's famed Elegy in a Country Churchyard and other great English works . . . the sudden ghostlike wraith which flashes in front of headlights in the far reaches of the Australian outback . . . and the everyday producer of the shrill rasping shiiish which reminded a humorous-minded Audubon of "an opossum about to die of strangulation." This painting originally appeared on the Fleetwood® First Day Cover of the USSR Barn Owl stamp issued September 18, 1979. Artwork Copyright © 1981 Unicover Corporation. All Rights Reserved under United States and international copyright laws. You may not reproduce, distribute, transmit, or otherwise exploit the Artwork in any way. Images of the Artwork may be watermarked and/or digitally watermarked. Any sale of the physical original does not include or convey the Copyright or any right comprised in the copyright.
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