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Book Categories |
List of Illustrations | ||
Preface | ||
Acknowledgments | ||
Summer, from Rural Hours | 1 | |
Birds and Their Friends | 9 | |
Plants That Eat Animals, from Home Studies in Nature | 17 | |
From On the Plains and among the Peaks; or How Mrs. Maxwell Made Her Natural History Collection, by Mary Dartt | 33 | |
Experiences of a Collector Collecting on Biscayne Bay, Part II | 45 | |
The Woman Botanist, from Summer in a Bog | 55 | |
The Home Life of the Chimney Swift, from Birds of an Iowa Dooryard | 62 | |
Down with the House Wren Boxes, from Birds of an Iowa Dooryard | ||
Communal Life, from Wasps: Social and Solitary, with George W. Peckham | 75 | |
Ammophila and Her Caterpillars, from Wasps: Social and Solitary, with George W. Peckham | ||
Letter: May 7, 1906 In Portu Bodega | 84 | |
Ruffed Grouse: Partridge, from Birds through an Opera Glass | 95 | |
Long-Billed Marsh Wren, from Birds of Village and Field | ||
Camping under the Stars on the Way Up, from Among the Birds in the Grand Canyon Country | ||
A Dweller in Tents, from Ways of the Six-Footed | 106 | |
The Hermit Thrush: The Voice of the Northern Woods | 114 | |
Tenants of Birdsacre | ||
Eastern Brazil through an Agrostologist's Spectacles | 126 | |
Camping on the Equator | 136 | |
Three Thousand Miles up the Amazon | ||
Mary S. Young's Journal of Botanical Explorations in Trans-Pecos, Texas, August-September, 1914 | 152 | |
Ecology and World War I, from Adventures in Ecology | 161 | |
Marooned in a Potato Field | 171 | |
Mayflies: Ephemerida (Plectoptera), from Field Book of Ponds and Streams | 179 | |
Fresh-Water Sponges in Winter | ||
The Awakening, from Research Is a Passion with Me | 189 | |
On Watching an Ovenbird's Nest, from The Watcher at the Nest | ||
The Grandchildren of Uno and 4M, from The Watcher at the Nest | ||
Behavior of Pompilid Wasps, from Wasp Studies Afield, with Phil Rau | 203 | |
Watching a Carolina Wren's Nest | 210 | |
Camping in the Kisatchie Wold | 216 | |
The Forest of Lynn Fork of Leatherwood | 223 | |
From Crip, Come Home | 230 | |
Sea Pansies, from The Edge of the Sea | 236 | |
Basket Starfish, from The Edge of the Sea | ||
The Other Road, from Silent Spring | ||
Afterword | ||
Selected Bibliography |
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Add American Women Afield: Writings by Pioneering Women Naturalists, Armed with hand lenses and opera glasses, traveling on foot, by buggy, or model T, they explored thousands of miles of deserts, forests, beaches, and jungles. They were pioneering women naturalists who observed, studied, and experimented, then returned to, American Women Afield: Writings by Pioneering Women Naturalists to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add American Women Afield: Writings by Pioneering Women Naturalists, Armed with hand lenses and opera glasses, traveling on foot, by buggy, or model T, they explored thousands of miles of deserts, forests, beaches, and jungles. They were pioneering women naturalists who observed, studied, and experimented, then returned to, American Women Afield: Writings by Pioneering Women Naturalists to your collection on WonderClub |