
audiobook
by John Cassin
ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE BIRDS OF CALIFORNIA, TEXAS, OREGON, BRITISH AND RUSSIAN AMERICA.
PREFACE.
ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE BIRDS OF CALIFORNIA, TEXAS, OREGON, AND BRITISH AND RUSSIAN AMERICA. - CYANOCORAX LUXUOSUS.—(Lesson.) The Mexican Jay. PLATE I.—Adult Male.
MELANERPES FORMICIVORUS.—(Swainson.) The Californian Woodpecker. PLATE II.—Male and female.
LOPHOPHANES ATRICRISTATUS.—(Cassin.) The Black-crested Chickadee. PLATE III.—Male and Female.
SYNOPSIS OF THE NORTH AMERICAN SPECIES OF THE SUB-FAMILY PARINÆ. - I. GENUS PARUS. Linnæus. Syst. Nat. I. p. 340. (1766.)
CYRTONYX MASSENA.—(Lesson.) The Massena Partridge. PLATE IV.—Male and Female.
LARUS HEERMANNI.—Cassin. The White-Headed Gull. PLATE V.—Adult Male and Young female.
HALIAETUS PELAGICUS.—(Pallas.) The Northern Sea Eagle. PLATE VI—Female.
CHAMÆA FASCIATA.—(Gambel.) The Ground Wren. PLATE VII.—Adult Male.
This volume brings together detailed drawings and concise descriptions of the birds that inhabit the western and southwestern reaches of North America, from the coastlines of California and Oregon to the plains of Texas and the distant territories once known as British and Russian America. Compiled during a period of rapid scientific exploration, the work captures the surge of knowledge sparked by new settlements and government surveys in the mid‑1800s.
The plates are rendered with careful attention to plumage and posture, offering listeners a vivid mental picture of each species as it was observed by naturalists of the era. Accompanying the illustrations are notes on habitat, behavior, and the expanding collections that made such a survey possible, positioning the book as both a field guide and a snapshot of a pivotal moment in American ornithology.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (745K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2021-08-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1813–1869
A leading American ornithologist of the mid-19th century, he helped turn bird study into a more careful science of description and classification. His work at Philadelphia’s Academy of Natural Sciences and his many published studies made him a central figure in early American bird taxonomy.
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