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:''For other meanings, see: ]. {{other uses|White Buffalo (disambiguation)}}


'''Mahpiya Ska''' (]) or '''White Cloud''' (July 10, 1996 – November 14, 2016) was an ] female ] primarily residing at the ] located in ]. She was on loan to the museum and the project caring for her was funded by the City of Jamestown for approximately $10,000 per year. She was certified a true Albino ]. She died November 14, 2016, at her birthplace herd that she had been returned to, Shirek Buffalo Ranch.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.buffalomuseum.com/passing-of-north-dakota-icon/ |title=Passing of North Dakota Icon |website=www.buffalomuseum.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161117212006/http://www.buffalomuseum.com/passing-of-north-dakota-icon/ |archive-date=2016-11-17}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.twincities.com/2016/11/15/white-cloud-north-dakotas-famed-albino-buffalo-dies-of-old-age/ | title=White Cloud, North Dakota's famed albino buffalo, dies of old age | date=16 November 2016 }}</ref>
]


White Cloud, like most albino buffalo, was almost totally ] and had limited vision and joined the herd located at the museum in 1997. She gave birth to several calves, although none of them were pure white. ] from all over America performed sacred pilgrimages to visit her. She was allowed to roam freely within a several hundred acre expanse of the museum grounds. The fence outside of her compound in Jamestown was tied with hundreds of prayer and ribbon bundles from Native Americans who traveled thousands of miles to offer prayers and receive blessings.
'''Mahpiya Ska''' (]) or '''White Cloud''' (Cherokee:ᎤᏁᎬ ᎤᎶᎩᎸ) is an ] female buffalo residing at the National Buffalo Museum and Cultural Center located in ]. She is currently on loan to the museum and the project caring for her is funded by the City of Jamestown North Dakota for approximately $10,000 per year. She has been certified a true Albino ].


According to ''Buffalo Tales'', the newsletter of the North Dakota Buffalo Foundation and the National Buffalo Museum, White Cloud had a white calf on August 31, 2007. According to the newsletter and the museum's website this was White Cloud's first white calf.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nationalbuffalomuseum.com/ |title=Home |website=nationalbuffalomuseum.com}}</ref> Museum officials determined that the calf was a male, but it would not be named until January 2008. The museum solicited suggestions from the public for a name for the calf until November 30, 2007. Finally, the name Dakota Miracle was decided on. While Dakota Miracle is white, he is not albino like his mother.
White Cloud, like most albino buffalo, is almost totally ] and has limited vision and joined the herd located at the museum in ]. She has already given birth to several calves, although none of them are pure white. ] from all over America perform sacred pilgrimages to visit her. She is allowed to roam freely within a several hundred acre expanse of the museum grounds.


White Cloud was born on July 10, 1996, on the Shirek Buffalo Farm in Michigan, North Dakota. She was DNA tested for albino genes and cattle genes before she went to the National Buffalo Museum in Jamestown, North Dakota in May 1997. The results of those tests indicated that she was pure albino and also pure bison (commonly known as buffalo). It is not known for sure whether or not White Cloud's white calf is also a true albino. The white calf was produced when White Cloud mated with her first male calf, a normally brown-colored bison.
The fence outside of her compound in Jamestown is tied with hundreds of prayer and ribbon bundles from Native Americans who travel thousands of miles to offer prayers and receive blessings.


==References== == See also ==
{{Unreferenced|date=June 2007}}


* ]
According to "Buffalo Tales", the newsletter of the North Dakota Buffalo Foundation and the National Buffalo Museum, White Cloud had a white calf on August 31, 2007. According to the newsletter and the museum's website, www.nationalbuffalomuseum.com, this was White Cloud's first white calf. Museum officials have determined that the calf is a male, but it will not be named until January 2008. The museum is soliciting suggestions from the public for a name for the calf until November 30, 2007.


==References==
White Cloud was born on July 10, 1996 on the Shirek Buffalo Farm in Michigan, North Dakota. She was DNA tested for albino genes and cattle genes before she went to the National Buffalo Museum in Jamestown, North Dakota in May of 1997. The results of those tests indicate that she is pure albino and also pure bison (commonly known as buffalo.) It is not known for sure whether or not White Cloud's white calf is also a true albino. The white calf was produced when White Cloud mated with her first male calf, a normally brown-colored bison.
<references/>


==External links== ==External links==
* *
* *
*, with photograph. From ''Cowboys and Indians'', October 2009, by Keith Norman.


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Latest revision as of 20:12, 26 December 2024

For other uses, see White Buffalo (disambiguation).

Mahpiya Ska (Sioux language) or White Cloud (July 10, 1996 – November 14, 2016) was an albino female buffalo primarily residing at the National Buffalo Museum located in Jamestown, North Dakota. She was on loan to the museum and the project caring for her was funded by the City of Jamestown for approximately $10,000 per year. She was certified a true Albino American Bison. She died November 14, 2016, at her birthplace herd that she had been returned to, Shirek Buffalo Ranch.

White Cloud, like most albino buffalo, was almost totally deaf and had limited vision and joined the herd located at the museum in 1997. She gave birth to several calves, although none of them were pure white. Native Americans from all over America performed sacred pilgrimages to visit her. She was allowed to roam freely within a several hundred acre expanse of the museum grounds. The fence outside of her compound in Jamestown was tied with hundreds of prayer and ribbon bundles from Native Americans who traveled thousands of miles to offer prayers and receive blessings.

According to Buffalo Tales, the newsletter of the North Dakota Buffalo Foundation and the National Buffalo Museum, White Cloud had a white calf on August 31, 2007. According to the newsletter and the museum's website this was White Cloud's first white calf. Museum officials determined that the calf was a male, but it would not be named until January 2008. The museum solicited suggestions from the public for a name for the calf until November 30, 2007. Finally, the name Dakota Miracle was decided on. While Dakota Miracle is white, he is not albino like his mother.

White Cloud was born on July 10, 1996, on the Shirek Buffalo Farm in Michigan, North Dakota. She was DNA tested for albino genes and cattle genes before she went to the National Buffalo Museum in Jamestown, North Dakota in May 1997. The results of those tests indicated that she was pure albino and also pure bison (commonly known as buffalo). It is not known for sure whether or not White Cloud's white calf is also a true albino. The white calf was produced when White Cloud mated with her first male calf, a normally brown-colored bison.

See also

References

  1. "Passing of North Dakota Icon". www.buffalomuseum.com. Archived from the original on 2016-11-17.
  2. "White Cloud, North Dakota's famed albino buffalo, dies of old age". 16 November 2016.
  3. "Home". nationalbuffalomuseum.com.

External links

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