National Science Library of Georgia

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The Great Auk, or Garefowl : its history, archaeology, and remains / Symington Grieve.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge library collectionPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2015Description: 1 online resource (1 volume (various pagins)) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781316155431 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 598.3/3 23
LOC classification:
  • QL696.C42 G75 2015
Online resources:
Contents:
Preface -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The distribution of the great auk -- 3. The living great auk in its European habitats -- 4. The remains of the great auk -- 5. The remains of the great auk in Denmark and Iceland -- 6. British remains of the great auk -- 7. British remains of the great auk (cont.) -- 8. How was Caisteal-nan-Gillean formed -- 9. English remains of the great auk -- 10. The habits of the garefowl, and the region it lived in -- 11. Information regarding existing remains of the great auk -- 12. The uses to which the great auk was put by man -- 13. The names by which the great auk has been known -- 14. The period during which the great auk lived -- Appendices -- Index.
Summary: The great auk (Pinguinus impennis, formerly Alca impennis), a flightless bird of the north Atlantic, became extinct in the mid-1850s because of over-hunting - apart from being used as a food source and as fish-bait, its down was used for feather beds, and efforts in the early nineteenth century to reduce the slaughter were not effective. The last breeding pair was killed in 1844. This 1885 work by Scottish naturalist and scientist Symington Grieve (1850-1932) collects together 'a considerable amount of literature bearing upon the 'History, Archaeology, and Remains' of this extinct bird'. The material includes articles on the historic distribution of the great auk, its known habits, its various names, and information on all the surviving specimens, whether stuffed, skeletal, bones, or eggs. The book is illustrated with drawings and lithographs of auk remains, and an appendix supplies historical and contemporary documents on the auk from all over Europe.
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Originally published: London : Thomas C. Jack, 1885.

Preface -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The distribution of the great auk -- 3. The living great auk in its European habitats -- 4. The remains of the great auk -- 5. The remains of the great auk in Denmark and Iceland -- 6. British remains of the great auk -- 7. British remains of the great auk (cont.) -- 8. How was Caisteal-nan-Gillean formed -- 9. English remains of the great auk -- 10. The habits of the garefowl, and the region it lived in -- 11. Information regarding existing remains of the great auk -- 12. The uses to which the great auk was put by man -- 13. The names by which the great auk has been known -- 14. The period during which the great auk lived -- Appendices -- Index.

The great auk (Pinguinus impennis, formerly Alca impennis), a flightless bird of the north Atlantic, became extinct in the mid-1850s because of over-hunting - apart from being used as a food source and as fish-bait, its down was used for feather beds, and efforts in the early nineteenth century to reduce the slaughter were not effective. The last breeding pair was killed in 1844. This 1885 work by Scottish naturalist and scientist Symington Grieve (1850-1932) collects together 'a considerable amount of literature bearing upon the 'History, Archaeology, and Remains' of this extinct bird'. The material includes articles on the historic distribution of the great auk, its known habits, its various names, and information on all the surviving specimens, whether stuffed, skeletal, bones, or eggs. The book is illustrated with drawings and lithographs of auk remains, and an appendix supplies historical and contemporary documents on the auk from all over Europe.

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