The Birds of Heaven: Travels with Cranes

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Macmillan, Dec 20, 2001 - Nature - 349 pages
A leading naturalist and writer travels the globe in search of a prized-and vanishing-bird

Cranes are ubiquitous in the earliest legends of the world's peoples, where they often figure as harbingers of heaven and omens of longevity and good fortune. They are still held sacred in many places, and for good reason. Their large size and need for wilderness habitat makes them an "umbrella species" whose wellbeing assures that of other creatures and of the ecosystem at large. Moreover, the enormous spans of their migrations are a symbol of, and stimulus to, international efforts at conservation.

In The Birds of Heaven, Peter Matthiessen has woven together journeys in search of the fifteen species of cranes in Asia, Africa, Europe, North America, and Australia. As he tracks them (and their declining numbers) in the company of scientists, conservationists, and regional people encountered along the way, he captures the dilemmas of a planet in ecological crisis, and the deeper loss to humankind if these beautiful and imposing creatures are allowed to disappear. The book includes color plates by renowned wildlife artist Robert Bateman.
 

Contents

On the Daurian Steppe
39
Gujarat and Rajasthan
93
At the End of Tibet
127
In the Nine Rivers
143
Hokkaido
164
The Accidental Paradise
187
Outback
211
Equatoria Ngorongoro Okavango and Transvaal
231
Down the Edges of the Distant Sky
251
Grus americana
274
The Evolution and Radiation of the Cranes
301
Acknowledgments
333
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About the author (2001)

Peter Matthiessen is a naturalist and explorer whose many works of nonfiction include "The Tree Where Man Was Born," which was nominated for a National Book Award and "The Snow Leopard," which won it. He is also the author of nine works of fiction, including "Far Tortuga," and, most recently, the Everglades trilogy that culminates in "Bone by Bone." Robert Bateman began studying birds at the age of twelve in his native Ontario. He lives in Canada.

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