Field Guide to the Cascades & Olympics

Portada
The Mountaineers Books, 2004 M04 2 - 317 páginas

* More than 700 color illustrations for easy identification
* Expanded with new sections on mushrooms, insects, and rock identification
* Handy color tabs for easy access, and quick reference index on back cover

Don't just call it a mushroom when it's a golden chanterelle; know your screech owl from your saw-whet owl; distinguish a monarch butterfly from a painted lady -- all with the help of this comprehensive guide to the common plants and animals of the Cascade and Olympic Mountains.

The species accounts have been updated with the latest taxonomic changes and, as before, include common name, scientific name, and description of important features, habitat, and geographic range.

 

Contenido

I
7
II
9
III
12
V
13
VI
17
VII
18
IX
35
X
49
XVII
157
XVIII
181
XIX
197
XX
198
XXI
211
XXIII
230
XXIV
236
XXV
279

XI
50
XIV
64
XV
78

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Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 298 - A Field Manual for the Amateur Geologist: Tools and Activities for Exploring Our Planet.
Página 298 - Northwest Exposures: A Geologic Story of the Northwest. Missoula. Mont.: Mountain Press Publishing.
Página 298 - W. 1975. Guide to the Geology of Olympic National Park Seattle: University of Washmgton Press.

Acerca del autor (2004)

STEPHEN R. WHITNEY is the author of six books on natural history, including Western Forests (Knopf) and A Field Guide to the Grand Canyon (The Mountaineers Books). He is a former managing editor of the Sierra Club Bulletin, now Sierra, associate editor of The Mother Earth News, and contributing editor of Backpacker magazine. In addition, he was editorial manager of The Mountaineers Books for six years. A resident of Washington State since 1978, he and his wife live alongside a lovely river a few miles outside of Seattle. ROB SANDELIN is a naturalist and environmental educator who has since childhood spent much of his life observing and studying nature in the mountains of the Northwest. He has served as a park naturalist at Yosemite National Park, Olympic National Park, and Denali National Park. Currently he teaches field skills to student naturalists at the Environmental Education School of the Sky Valley Education Center in Monroe, Washington. He is the author of This Week in the Woods, a series of natural history essays; the Cohousing Resource Guide; and the Intentional Communities Resource Pages website. He lives with family and friends in the Sharingwood Cohousing Community in Snohomish County.

Información bibliográfica