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Several pieces used in fairy chess problems are leapers or jumpers: pieces that in some way generalize the movement of a knight, but move different numbers of squares in the directions. Many of these pieces have animal names: Camel, Gnus, Antelope, etc. The Bison is also a piece of this family. It appears (infrequently) in fairy chess problems; Jelliss (see reference below) gives a mate in two by P. Monreal and F. Calvet from the Problemist, 1974 as an example.
The bison can either move one squares in one orthogonal direction and then three in the other orthogonal direction, (like a camel), or two squares in one orthogonal direction and then three in the other orthogonal direction (a stretched knights-move). When moving, the bison jumps, i.e., the move can be completed regardless whether the intervening squares are occupied.
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The Bison (here depicted with a picture of another animal, the wildebeest) can move to any square with a black circle, regardless whether squares he passes over are occupied or not.
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Created on: May 30, 1999. Last modified on: May 30, 1999.
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Last modified: Monday, December 22, 2008