Jungle Peace

by William Beebe

Hardcover, 1925

Status

Available

Collection

Publication

Modern Library (1925), Edition: First Modern Library Edition, Hardcover, 297 pages

Description

Naturalist, ornithologist, marine biologist, entomologist, explorer and gifted writer, William Beebe escapes from the violence of World War 1 into the jungle of British Guiana. There he finds a different kind of violence provided by nature.Beebe's curiosity, patience and powers of observation focus on and magnify nature's raw details revealing the huge drama being played out in the tropical jungle. From his adventures aboard ship, the Hoatzin, a rare bird that never leaves home, hordes of Army Ants on the attack, a snake crawling at night, the Hindu immigrants who work the plantations, the building of a new road by convicts, Beebe colorfully describes a true adventure.William Beebe is one of the founders of the field of ecology and an early advocate for conservation. When he wrote Jungle Peace, he was the Curator of Birds at New York Zoological Park and was Director of the Tropical Research Station. Some years later, he was the first biologist to observe deep-sea life in the original underwater Bathysphere.There are 11 chapters in "Jungle Peace" plus an enthusiastic review by Theodore Roosevelt in this first person narrative recorded for the first time as an audiobook.… (more)

Language

Original publication date

1918

ISBN

none
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