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Warriors, dilettantes and businessmen - Bird collectors during the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries in Southern Africa (Paperback)
Loot Price: R231
Discovery Miles 2 310
You Save: R64
(22%)
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Warriors, dilettantes and businessmen - Bird collectors during the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries in Southern Africa (Paperback)
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List price R295
Loot Price R231
Discovery Miles 2 310
You Save R64 (22%)
Expected to ship within 5 - 17 working days
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This book focuses on the activities of all the people who collected
bird specimens in southern Africa, and their contribution to the
science of southern African ornithology. In addition to the
collectors, it covers some of the history and the development of
ornithology as a science in southern Africa. Dr Richard Dean draws
particular attention to the fact that the southern African region
is blessed with an exceptionally rich bird fauna involving over 900
taxa. It is often difficult to identify closely related species in
the field and this is why it has been so important to build up
extensive collections of preserved bird skins and of eggs in
natural history museums in various parts of the country and
elsewhere in the world. The book explains how the collectors of
these specimens were active in selling or donating them to museums
or they were collected by dedicated people with a passionate
interest in the birds themselves. Particular attention was given to
the period between 1850 and 1950 when museum collections were
growing intensively, and were being used. These bird collections
have been used by several authors to provide material for books on
birds during this period – E.L. Layard, A.C. Stark and W.L.
Sclater, V. FitzSimons and E.L. Gill, to name a few. A major user
of bird collections in southern Africa was Austin Roberts, who
compiled the first edition of the Birds of South Africa (First
Edition 1940), extracting much of the original information for the
descriptions from bird material that he had personally collected
for the Transvaal Museum collection (now Ditsong National Museum of
Natural History). Another major user of the bird collections was Dr
P.A. Clancey, who used the collection at the Durban Natural Science
Museum to describe and name a large number of subspecies of birds,
as well as publishing books on birds. The writing of this book on
the collectors of South African birds was made possible by the
author’s life-long preoccupation with the natural history of birds.
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