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Round River eBook

by Aldo Leopold
language: english
Publisher: Oxford University Press, March of 1972 ‧
17,21€
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To those who know the charm of Aldo Leopold''s writing in A Sand County Almanac, this collection from his journals and essays will be a new delight. The journal entries included here were written in camp during his many field trips--hunting, fishing, and exploring--and they indicate the source of ideas on land ethics found in his longer essays. They reflect as well two long canoe trips in Canada and a sojourn in Mexico, where Leopold hunted deer with bow and arrow. The essays presented here are culled from the more contemplative notes which were still in manuscript form at the time of Leopold''s death in 1948, fighting a brush fire on a neighbor''s farm. Round River has been edited by Leopold''s son, Luna, a geologist well-known in the field of conservation. It is also charmingly illustrated with line drawings by Charles W. Schwartz. All admirers of Leopold''s work--indeed, all lovers of nature--will find this book richly rewarding.

Round River

by Aldo Leopold

Property Description
ISBN: 9780199878420
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Release Date: March of 1972
Language: English
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility:
Collection: Galaxy Books
Categories: eBooks in English > Science > Other sciences
eBooks in English > Science > Mathematics
EAN: 9780199878420
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aldo Leopold

Aldo Leopold was born in 1887 in Burlington, Iowa, United States of America, the eldest of four children of Carl and Clara Leopold. He was the grandson of a German immigrant who made his name as a landscape architect, author of several parks in Burlington. Even as a child, he was enthusiastic about contact with nature, a pursuit encouraged by his father, and he was drawn to forestry studies from an early age, graduating in 1909 from Yale School of Forestry. That same year he joined the United States Forest Service, created only four years earlier. Since at least 1915, his civic activity in the field of nature conservation has been noteworthy, helping to create associations for the protection of game species and editing the newsletter. Pine CodeIn 1928 he left the Forest Service and began working as a consultant. In 1933 he took over the chair of game management in the agricultural economics department at the University of Wisconsin. In 1935, he became one of the founders of Wilderness Society (Society for the Wild). He published numerous articles and some books, and meanwhile conceived a book project that would become very special and for whose publication he fought hard in the last years of his life. He wrote it based both on his profound scientific training, his philosophy and activity as a conservationist, and also on the experience provided by the family farm, acquired in 1935 in the Baraboo Sands region, Wisconsin. The ecological essays gathered in this book would only be published, with the now celebrated title, An Almanac of Sand County...even after his death in the fall of 1949. In fact, on April 21, 1948, he had succumbed to a heart attack while helping to fight a fire on a neighboring farm near his own, close to the Wisconsin River. Today his influence is immense. In the vein of John Muir, founder of the conservation movement, Aldo is the inspiring figure of a new breath of life, inaugurating the modern phase of the movement from a clearly ecological perspective. Reading and rereading him, we will always find new treasures, never tarnished.

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