The Olympic Elk
The Olympic Elk is a 1952 American short documentary film directed by James Algar and produced by Walt Disney as part of the True-Life Adventures series of nature documentaries.[1]
The Olympic Elk | |
---|---|
Directed by | James Algar |
Produced by | Walt Disney |
Written by | Winston Hibler Ted Sears James Algar |
Narrated by | Winston Hibler |
Music by | Paul Smith |
Cinematography | Herb Crisler Lois Crisler |
Edited by | Anthony Gerard |
Production company | |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 27 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Summary
A photographic study of the Olympic elk which abound on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington describes the life of the herd in winter quarters in the rain forest; the trek to summer feeding grounds; and the placid summer existence of the herd which culminates in the September mating season.[2]
Cast
- Winston Hibler as Narrator
gollark: It would be quite annoying on larger things, but if you had, say, a 3-sided die, a 4-sided one, and a 5-sided one, and wanted to have 2 of them show a 1, then the possibilities are just 1, 1, anything and anything, 1, 1 (order is 3-sided, 4-sided, 5-sided).So you can work out the probability of each case (1/3 * 1*4 * 1 and 1 * 1/4 * 1/5) and add them.
gollark: Enumerate all the different possibilities where you have X dice showing 3, work out the probability of each, then add them?
gollark: Just multiply the probabilities for getting side X on each die together?
gollark: You also are probably not running Haskell with its giant runtime on a microcontroller doing those things.
gollark: My friend likes Haskell but also spends time reading incomprehensible papers on logic and type theory and such.
References
- Cynthia Chris (2006). Watching Wildlife. University of Minnesota Press. p. 29. ISBN 0-8166-4547-7.
- "The Olympic Elk" at worldcat.org
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