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In a Patch of Fireweed: A Biologist's Life in the Field Revised Edition
Contributor(s): Heinrich, Bernd (Author)
ISBN: 0674445511     ISBN-13: 9780674445512
Publisher: Harvard University Press
OUR PRICE:   $31.68  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: September 1991
Qty:
Annotation: Part autobiography, part case study in the ways of field biology, 'In a Patch of Fireweed' is an endlessly fascinating account of a scientist's life and work. For the author, it is an opportunity to report not just his results but the curiosity, humor, error, passion, and competitiveness that feed the process of discovery.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Science | Life Sciences - Biology
Dewey: 574
LCCN: 83013043
Lexile Measure: 1260
Series: Biologist's Life in the Field
Physical Information: 0.6" H x 6.02" W x 9.38" (0.69 lbs) 208 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Why would a grown man chase hornets with a thermometer, paint whirligig beetles bright red, or track elephants through the night to fill trash bags with their prodigious droppings? Some might say--to advance science. Bernd Heinrich says--because it's fun.

Heinrich, author of the much acclaimed Bumblebee Economics, has been playing in the wilds of one continent or another all his life. In the process, he has become one of the world's foremost physiological ecologists. With In a Patch of Fireweed, he will undoubtedly become one of our foremost writers of popular science.

Part autobiography, part case study in the ways of field biology, In a Patch of Fireweed is an endlessly fascinating account of a scientist's life and work. For the author, it is an opportunity to report not just his results but the curiosity, humor, error, passion, and competitiveness that feed into the process of discovery. For the reader, it is simply a delight, a rare chance to share the perceptions of an unusual mind fully in tune with the inner workings of nature. Before his years of research in the woodlands and deserts of North America, the New Guinea highlands, and the plains of East Africa, Heinrich had a sense of the wild that few people in this century can know. He tells the whole story, from his refugee childhood hidden in a German forest, eating mice fried in boar fat, to his ongoing research in the woods surrounding his cabin in Maine.


Contributor Bio(s): Heinrich, Bernd: - Bernd Heinrich is Professor Emeritus of Biology at the University of Vermont. He has written several memoirs of his life in science and nature, including One Man's Owl, Ravens in Winter, and A Year in the Maine Woods, which won the 1995 Rutstrum Authors' Award for Literary Excellence.