Front cover image for Tracks and shadows : field biology as art

Tracks and shadows : field biology as art

"Intellectually rich, intensely personal, and beautifully written, Tracks and Shadows is both an absorbing autobiography of a celebrated field biologist and a celebration of beauty in nature. Harry W. Greene, award-winning author of Snakes: The Evolution of Mystery in Nature delves into the poetry of field biology, showing how nature eases our existential quandaries. More than a memoir, the book is about the wonder of snakes, the beauty of studying and understanding natural history, and the importance of sharing the love of nature with humanity. Greene begins with his youthful curiosity about the natural world and moves to his stints as a mortician's assistant, ambulance driver, and army medic. In detailing his academic career, he describes how his work led him to believe that nature's most profound lessons lurk in hard-won details. He discusses the nuts and bolts of field research and teaching, contrasts the emotional impact of hot dry habitats with hot wet ones, imparts the basics of snake biology, and introduces the great explorers Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace. He reflects on friendship and happiness, tackles notions like anthropomorphism and wilderness, and argues that organisms remain the core of biology, science plays key roles in conservation, and natural history offers an enlightened form of contentment."-- Provided by publisher
Print Book, English, 2013
University of California Press, Berkeley, 2013
Autobiography
xiii, 280 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
9780520232754, 9780520956735, 9780520292659, 0520232755, 0520956737, 0520292650
839395806
Part One. Descent with Modification. 1. Tracks and shadows ; 2. Naturalist ; 3. Nerd ; 4. Field biologist ; 5. Medic
Part Two. Conversing with serpents. 6. Graduate school ; 7. Hot dry places ; 8. Hot wet places ; 9. Giant serpents ; 10. Venomous serpents
Part Three. Pretty in sunlight. 11. Friends ; 12. Loose ends ; 13. Born-again predator ; 14. Field biology as art