var arrayFacts = [

"<b>Boulder or Bust!</b><br><br>Like many marmots, Yellow-bellied marmots nest in among a pile of boulders.<br><br>They dig their burrow systems beneath the boulders and rely on the rocks to keep out predators. ",

"<b>Marmot Microbe:</b><br><br>Most recent human cases of plague in China's Qinghai Province were caused by hunting or eating marmots.",

"<b>A Meal of a Marmot:</b><br><br>The woodchuck is the most famous North American Marmot. In the south, there is a rich tradition of hunting and cooking <i>chucks.</i><br><br>Mongolians also love marmot meat, which is high in protein and is suspected to have medicinal value.",

"<b>Gotta Love the Marmot:</b><br><br>In Russia, marmots are hunted for fur, medicine, food, and even observational enjoyment.",

"<b>Almost Lost:</b><br><br>The Vancouver Marmot, discovered in 1910, is considered one of the rarest mammals in North America.<br><br>There are fewer than 100 individuals living in the wild!",

"<b>Sleeping Beauties:</b><br><br>Marmots tend to hibernate for the majority of the year.<br><br>Even the Vancouver Marmot, which lives in a relatively mild climate, spends seven or eight months underground and hibernating.",

"<b>All they do is Eat and Sleep:</b><br><br>Alaskan Marmots must eat an enormous amount during waking hours because arctic plants have low nutritional value and they must stock up for hibernation.<br><br>The marmots burrow underground in September and hibernate until June."];
