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قراءة كتاب Fifty Birds of Town and City

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‏اللغة: English
Fifty Birds of Town and City

Fifty Birds of Town and City

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

As the Nation’s principal conservation agency, the Department of the Interior has basic responsibilities for water, fish, wildlife, mineral, land, park, and recreational resources. Indian and Territorial affairs are other major concerns of America’s “Department of Natural Resources.” The Department works to assure the wisest choice in managing all our resources so each will make its full contribution to a better United States—now and in the future.

Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service emblems
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402
Price $4 cloth; $1.05 paper
Stock Number 2410-0332

FIFTY BIRDS
of Town and City

Blue Jay

by
BOB HINES
Illustrator-Editor
and

PETER A. ANASTASI
Associate Editor

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife

Foreword

Early in this century, the old Bureau of Biological Survey put out a booklet called “Fifty Common Birds of Farm and Orchard,” with paintings by Louis Agassiz Fuertes.

In 1962, a former Fish and Wildlife Service staffer named Rachael Carson wrote “Silent Spring,” a book that changed American thinking about birds—and pesticides.

That first volume is out of date because of our great population shifts in six decades. And I hope that “Silent Spring” will be out of date some day; that our birds will live with us in an unpoisoned environment of cities and towns that are cleaner, healthier, greener.

So here is a new “bird book” from the Department of the Interior, geared to the 50 birds you might see in your city, with paintings done by a man who picked up the fallen Fuertes brush, Bob Hines. These are not endangered birds, except as all living things are endangered; some of them are living in or passing through your backyard or city park right now. Look well at Bob’s art; he is not commemorating the passenger pigeon but trying to open your eyes to the world about you.

And he is trying to suggest that these birds can live in our towns and cities so long as you help provide the healthy habitat they need, habitat that is healthy not just for them but for you.

Enjoy this little book, learn from it, and take a vow that our springs will not be silent of bird calls—and will be more silent of human clatter.

Rogers CB Morton

Secretary of the Interior

Contents

Page
1  Baltimore Oriole
2  Barn Swallow
3  Black-capped Chickadee
4  Bluebird
5  Blue Jay
6  Bobwhite
7  Brown Creeper
8  Brown Thrasher
9  Canada Goose
10  Cardinal
11  Catbird
12  Cedar Waxwing
13  Chimney Swift
14  Chipping Sparrow
15  Cowbird
16  Crow
17  Downy Woodpecker
18  Flicker
19  Goldfinch
20  Grackle
21  Green Heron
22  Herring Gull
23  House Sparrow
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