Migration of Birds (1979)

audiobook

Migration of Birds (1979)

by Frederick Charles Lincoln, Steven R. Peterson

EN·~4 hours·22 chapters

Chapters

22 total

MIGRATION OF BIRDS

2:02

PREFACE

2:28

INTRODUCTION

4:38

THE HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MIGRATION

6:27

TECHNIQUES FOR STUDYING MIGRATION

15:13

ADVANTAGES OF MIGRATION

3:50

STIMULUS FOR MIGRATION

4:41

WHEN BIRDS MIGRATE

13:56

SPEED OF FLIGHT AND MIGRATION

16:22

ALTITUDE OF FLIGHT AND MIGRATION

9:23

Description

This engaging volume offers a thorough look at why and how birds travel across continents each year. Beginning with a clear explanation of the physical adaptations that enable flight, it guides listeners through the seasonal rhythms that drive migration, from the first stirrings in spring to the massive departures of autumn. The author blends classic observations from the 1930s with modern research up to the early 1970s, keeping the narrative lively for both seasoned birdwatchers and curious newcomers.

The book then explores the tools scientists use to track these journeys—visual spotting, sound cues, banding, radio telemetry, and even radar—illustrated with vivid diagrams that bring complex methods to life. Readers will discover the major flyways across North America, the variety of migration patterns such as loops and vertical movements, and the challenges birds face from weather to geography. By the end of the first part, listeners gain a solid foundation for appreciating the marvel of avian migration and are invited to explore the deeper questions that still intrigue researchers.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (243K characters)

Series

Circular (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service), 16.

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Tom Cosmas from materials made available on The Internet Archive.

Release date

2021-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Frederick Charles Lincoln

Frederick Charles Lincoln

1892–1960

A pioneering bird expert, he helped turn bird banding into a practical tool for tracking migration across North America. His writing brings scientific observation and a clear love of birds together in a way that still feels accessible.

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SR

Steven R. Peterson

Best known for revising a classic U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service guide to bird migration, this writer helped make a complex natural phenomenon clear and engaging for general readers. The surviving public record is sparse, but his name remains closely tied to one of the most widely circulated introductions to how and why birds travel.

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