Catalog Search Results
Author
Publisher
Penguin Books
Pub. Date
2005.
Description
"What happens when the charming, animal-obsessed boy of the classic memoirs My Family and Other Animals and Birds, Beasts, and Other Relatives grows up? He founds a zoo, of course. On his third trip to West Africa, he and his wife capture animals for this enterprise. Upon returning to England, however, they have nowhere to put the animals - Cholmondeley the chimpanzee, Bug-eye the bush baby, and others - as managing his menagerie proves to be just...
Author
Publisher
University Press of Colorado
Pub. Date
©1993
Description
Colorado: The Place of Nature the Nature of Place is a timely natural history of Colorado that looks at various environments within the state and how they have been altered by human intervention. The twelve environments presented are unique yet representative samples of the natural world of Colorado and were chosen not for their popularity but for their pristine character. Their locations range from the sweeping grasslands and broad river valleys...
9) Uncompahgre
Author
Publisher
Caxton Printers
Pub. Date
1981.
Description
Colorado Collection
Uncompahgre tells about one of Colorado's little visited, yet magnificent scenic routes. The Uncompahgre Plateau is a flat-topped mountain -- Colorado's largest in terms of square feet. It extends from Grand Junction to Ridgway with nearly 2,000 square miles of slashing canyons, weird geology, lush trees, and vast horizons.
Author
Description
"A River No More makes a statement of the utmost importance and gravity. Though it focuses on the Colorado River and its tributaries, the book's implications reach from the high plains of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico to the Pacific littoral; from federal land and water policies to the survival strategies of the ranches, farms, country towns, and small regional capitals that constitute the west's only permanent and renewable way of life."...
Author
Publisher
Colorado Associated University Press
Pub. Date
©1985
Description
For over thirty-seven years, Margaret and Olaus Murie made their home in the mountainous wilderness of the Tetons, where Olaus Murie conducted his famous studies of the American elk, the wapiti. Through these years their home was almost a nature-conservation shrine to thousands of Americans interested in the out-of-doors, in animals, in nature in general. Wapiti Wilderness, begun by Mrs. Murie as a sequel to her Two in the Far North, which told of...
Author
Description
Mardy Murie writes about growing up in Fairbanks, becoming the first woman graduate of the University of Alaska, and marrying noted biologist Olaus J. Murie. So begins her lifelong journey in Alaska and on to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where along with her husband and others, they founded The Wilderness Society. Mardy's work as one of the earliest female voices for the wilderness movement earned her the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Didn't find it?
Can't find what you are looking for? Try our Materials Request Service. Submit Request