Mon night I was out at 8:30pm setting out cardboard squares for an acid rain study I conduct in conjuction with data collection about Birds in Forested Landscapes for Cornell. My study site is off a secondary logging road about 1/2 mile into the forest. As I walked in I was totally tuned into the sounds of the forest, the full moon rising and the cool temperatures. I poured my 1 liter water on the cardboard and placed it on the leaf litter. I then did my 20 paces south and was bent over pouring the water onto the second cardboard when I heard a high pitched scream with gutteral sounds from behind me where I had just walked. I stood up and turned around and froze. Suddenly a deer came crashing wildly right at me - zig zagged by in a panic and was gone. I could hear rustling noise not far away. My mind is whirling - do I make noise and scare whatever is there? Do I keep quiet and hope to witness some event unfolding? Am I in danger? I wait a few seconds. I move a little. Not more than 30' from me in the road I see a coyote - big, more black than brown. It senses me and moves away slowly and warily. When I step out into the road, I see the prey - a fawn - very young - maybe only a couple of weeks old. Not more than 40'-50' from where I was! Less than 5 min. earlier I had walked by on the road where the kill occurred. Where were the prey and preditor then? I heard nothing of note but the Veery, Wood Thrush, Scarlet Tanager --- until the death cry. I don't think I will ever forget this encounter with Mother Nature at her most basic level. Ironically, I had seen a doe and fawn earlier in the day in another area where I was chasing butterflies. Ruth Charlie & Ruth Stewart E. Dorset, Vermont U.S.A.