
audiobook
[p i]ESSAYS ON EARLY ORNITHOLOGY
[p v]ESSAYSONEARLY ORNITHOLOGYAND KINDRED SUBJECTS
WITH THREE PLATES
[p vii]CONTENTS
[p1]THE RUKH OF MARCO POLO
[p5]THE PENGUINS AND THE SEALSOF THEANGRA DE SAM BRÀS
[p13]THE BANDA ISLANDS AND THE BANDAN BIRDS
[p19]THE ETYMOLOGY OF THE NAME ‘EMU’
[p23]AUSTRALIAN BIRDS IN 1697
[p29]NEW ZEALAND BIRDS IN 1772.
This collection gathers a handful of thoughtful essays that explore how early travelers and naturalists first tried to make sense of the birds they encountered. One piece dives into the legendary rukh—a creature that sits between pure myth and the faint echo of a real sea‑eagle—showing how storytellers blended wonder with observation long before modern field guides existed. The writing invites listeners to see how folklore and fact co‑existed in the minds of people living on the edge of the known world.
Another essay turns to the chilly coasts of southern Africa, recounting the seals, penguins and mysterious “quoquas” that appeared in the logs of Vasco da Gama’s inaugural voyage. By juxtaposing the raw notes of explorers like Marco Polo and Columbus with contemporary reflections, the author highlights the early role of birdwatching in navigation and discovery. The result is a lively, scholarly glimpse into the birth of ornithology, where curiosity and imagination first took flight.
Language
en
Duration
~36 minutes (34K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Wilson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2008-02-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
A Scottish-born Australian man of letters, he moved easily between poetry, history, geography, cartography, and natural history. His work is especially remembered for a detailed study of the Portuguese navigator Pedro Álvares Cabral.
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