Bird Island in Antarctic Waters

THE ADVENTURES OF AN ARTIST/ORNITHOLOGIST
ON A LONELY OUTCROP IN THE FAR SOUTH ATLANTIC

by
David F. Parmelee


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Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: published by University of Minnesota Press, 1980 (first edition).

Hardcover.

11 x 8.5 in. 140 pages.

Includes many colour and black & white photos and illustrations, plus maps.

Condition: good. This is a nice clean, bright copy - a tiny closed tear on the jacket's bottom adge - a tiny sprinkle of foxing on the top edges and inside the jacket, but no other markings.


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Few maps show the location of Bird Island—a lonely outcrop in the South Georgia group where Antarctic waters push against the Atlantic east of Cape Horn. Its forbidding flanks invite few human visitors. But for those who reach its shores there are rich rewards. Ornithologist David Parmelee was one of the fortunate. Nowhere in the bird world has he seen anything to match the incredible numbers and unusual gathering of birds on this teeming speck of land. A quarter million penguins on Macaroni Point, the enormous wandering albatross, petrels, skuas, pintails, pipits, and shags, as well as nearly 80,000 ferocious fur seals, all inhabit Bird Island.

Professor Parmelee, a skilled artist as well as a scientist-explorer, spent six weeks on the island as the guest of a British scientific survey team. His story combines careful field observation with the excitement of exploration. Bird Island in Antarctic Waters is illustrated with the author's drawings, paintings, and photographs, which, in color and black and white, capture the wildlife and scenery of a fascinating part of the world.