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Cover of A feathered river across the sky: the passenger pigeon's flight to extinction

A feathered river across the sky: the passenger pigeon's flight to extinction

✍ Scribed by Joel Greenberg


Book ID
100115126
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Weight
738 KB
Edition
First U.S. edition
Category
Fiction
ISBN
1620405350

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The epic story of why passenger pigeons became extinct and what that says about our current relationship with the natural world.

When Europeans arrived in North America, 25 to 40 percent of the continent's birds were passenger pigeons, traveling in flocks so massive as to block out the sun for hours or even days. The downbeats of their wings would chill the air beneath and create a thundering roar that would drown out all other sound. John James Audubon, impressed by their speed and agility, said a lone passenger pigeon streaking through the forest "passes like a thought." How prophetic--for although a billion pigeons likely crossed the skies near Toronto in May of 1860, little more than fifty years later passenger pigeons were extinct. The last of the species, Martha, died in captivity at the Cincinnati Zoo on September 1, 1914. As naturalist Joel Greenberg relates in gripping detail, the pigeons' propensity to nest, roost, and fly together in vast numbers made...


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