
audiobook
by J. A. (John Alexander) Harvie-Brown, Richard Manliffe Barrington, John Cordeaux, Alexander Goodman More
REPORT ON THE MIGRATION OF BIRDS IN THE SPRING AND AUTUMN OF 1883.
A meticulous record of late‑19th‑century bird migration, this report brings together a team of dedicated naturalists tasked by the British Association to catalogue the movements of countless winged travelers. Drawing on observations from lighthouses, lightships and remote stations across Scotland, England, Ireland and even Iceland, the authors blend scientific rigor with a palpable sense of wonder at the seasonal journeys of seabirds and songsters alike.
The pages are filled with precise entries—species names, dates of arrival, weather conditions and exact locations—offering a vivid snapshot of avian life in 1883. Readers will discover how early electric lighting startled flocks, how stormy skies shaped routes, and how coordinated international data‑sharing laid groundwork for modern ornithology. For anyone fascinated by natural history, this document captures the diligent, patient observation that defined Victorian science and still informs today’s understanding of migration patterns.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (270K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Tom Cosmas compiled from materials made freely available on The Internet Archive and placed in the Public Domain.
Release date
2021-06-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1844–1916
A Scottish ornithologist and naturalist, he devoted much of his life to studying birds, migration, and the wildlife of northern Britain. His writing brings together careful observation, travel, and a lasting curiosity about the natural world.
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1849–1915
A devoted Irish naturalist and ornithologist, he is best remembered for careful fieldwork on bird migration and for a landmark study of the birds of the St Kilda islands. His life also had an adventurous side, from sea-stack climbing to scientific travel.
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1831–1899
A keen English naturalist and ornithologist, he became especially known for careful work on bird migration and for documenting the birds of the Humber district. His writing reflects a patient observer deeply engaged with the natural world of nineteenth-century Britain.
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1830–1895
A keen-eyed naturalist of the Victorian era, he is remembered for careful studies of birds and plants in Ireland and Britain. His writing brings together patient field observation, scientific curiosity, and a real feeling for the living world.
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