A Herd of Ghost Deer Roams the Abandoned Seneca Army Depot in Upstate New York

The Ghost Deer of Seneca's Abandoned Army Depot

The Ghost Deer of Seneca's Abandoned Army Depot

Atlas Obscura
Your Guide to the World's Hidden Wonders
Sept. 13 2013 9:55 AM

A Herd of Ghost Deer Roams Seneca's Abandoned Army Depot

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For years, rumors circulated about the strange herd of white deer living in the former Seneca Army Depot in Seneca County, New York. Some speculated that the "albino" breed of deer was the result of an army experiment gone wrong, while others attributed the animals' appearance to an underground supply of radioactive military weapons. Neither of these rumors, however, are true.

The white deer were first spotted around 1941, when the U.S. Army fenced off 24 square miles of land for the Seneca Army Depot, a munitions storage site. Under the protection of the security fencing, the deer population thrived -- and, along with it, a recessive gene for white coloration. Though the animals appeared to be albino, they were in fact white-tailed deer who carried the recessive gene for an all-white coat.

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As the white deer population proliferated through the 1950s, the U.S. Army decided to protect the unique herd. Aiding in the process of artificial selection, a depot commander managed the brown deer population through hunting and forbade GIs from shooting any white deer. Since then, the white deer population has grown to approximately 300, making it the largest herd of white deer in the world.

The Seneca Army Depot shut down in 2000 and has been closed to the public ever since. A non-profit group, Seneca White Deer, Inc., has been fighting to turn the area into a conservation park and Cold War museum. Until then, dozens of deer are visible from the highway, frolicking among the hundreds of abandoned bunkers.

Animals amok:


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