NEW LIBRARY ACQUISITIONS FOR MEMBERS' LENDING
December -- 2000

California Academy of Sciences Library

Books
Children's Books
Multimedia & Audio/Visual
Curriculum Guides

BOOKS

Pub. BL439 .R36 2000
Animal Grace: Entering a Spiritual Relationship with Our Fellow Creatures / Mary Lou Randour.
Novato, CA: New World Library, 2000.
This book, authored by a professional psychologist, the director of programs for Psychologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, asks the reader to make two basic commitments. One, expand your awareness of animals and the roles they play in your life. Two, take compassionate action on behalf of animals. The chapters included in the volume are "What Animals Can Teach Us about Spirituality," "Entering a Spiritual Relationship with Animals," "The Peaceable Kindom," "The New Kashrut: The Spiritual Depth of Vegetarianism," "Ahimsa: Cultivating Nonviolence toward Animals," "The Souls and Spiritual Lives of Animals," and "The Parallel Worlds of Human and Nonhuman Animals."
The book contains notes by chapter and an index.

Pub. E99 .F7 Y688 1992
Black Eagle Child: The Facepaint Narratives / Ray A. Young Bear.
Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Press, 1992.
Ray A. Young Bear, a writer, musician, and poet, uses himself and his story alter egos to present his autobiography. The narratives contain fascinating composite characters, and trace life through anecdotes from 1965-1989.

Pub. QL84.2 .W53 1999
The Condor's Shadow: The Loss and Recovery of Wildlife in America / David S. Wilcove.
New York: W.H. Freeman and Company, 1999.
In this book, the author, a Senior Ecologist at the Environmental Defense Fund, writes of the state of wildlife in America today. In discussing where we stand today and how we got there, he puts across key issues and obstacles that we face in maintaining biodiversity in the United States. There are over 100,000 identified species in the US. Of those, it is likely that 16,000 are in danger of extinction right now. Most of those species are located in four regions of the US: Hawaii, southern California, the southeastern coastal states, and the southern Appalachians. What these places all have in common is endemic species, large numbers of species, and an increase in development. It won't easy, but Wilcove believes it can be done, and that it's worth the effort to fight.
The book contains notes by chapter, literature cited, and an index.

Pub. GV200.5 .G78 1998
Desert Hiking Tips: Expert Advice on Desert Hiking and Driving / Bruce Grubbs.
Helena, MT: Falcon Publishing, 1998.
The author, a veteran outdoorsman, provides recommendations on techniques and equipment to help you feel comfortable and prepared to hike the desert. In sections titled Desert Tips and Leave No Trace, he discusses trip planning, maps, water, clothing, using maps and compasses, vehicle preparation, trail and off-trail hiking, emergency signals, blisters, hot and cold weather, lightning, picking a campsite, going without fire, keeping food safe from wildlife, and breaking camp.
The book also includes a list of suggested reading, a sample backpacking checklist, illustrations, and more.

Pub. GV838.673 .C86 W55 1999
Diving & Snorkeling Cuba / Diana Williams.
Melbourne, Australia; Oakland, CA: Lonely Planet Publications, 1999.
Pub. GV838.673 .D6 L39 1999
Diving & Snorkeling Dominica / Michael Lawrence.
Melbourne, Australia; Oakland, CA: Lonely Planet Publications, 1999.
How about a dip in the sparkling blue waters surrounding Cuba or Dominica? Don't forget your gear! Along with the other information that Lonely Planet consistently provides, the Cuba book has a section that is specifically for United States citizens traveling to the "forbidden island."
Background historical information for the islands is just the beginning of the information that the guides provide. All of the practicalities are covered, including how to get there and where to stay. General maps are included, as well as maps and information about specific dive sites. Easy to understand icons are used to indicate experience levels and requirements. Make sure you look at the color photographs of the marine life you're likely to encounter, as well as the hazardous marine life that you want to avoid!

Pub. GF75 .E56 1991
Environment in Peril / Edited by Anthony B. Wolbarst.
Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1991.
These essays, arising from seminars conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency, speak to broad environmental issues and emphasize how government can and must act to preserve the planet and its biodiversity before it's too late. The essays included are from such well known figures as Ralph Nader, Carl Sagan, Paul Ehrlich, Jacques Cousteau, and others.

Pub. GF75 .E56 1991
Environment in Peril / Edited by Anthony B. Wolbarst.
Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1991.
These essays, arising from seminars conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency, speak to broad environmental issues and emphasize how government can and must act to preserve the planet and its biodiversity before it's too late. The essays included are from such well known figures as Ralph Nader, Carl Sagan, Paul Ehrlich, Jacques Cousteau, and others.

Pub. QK929 .T48 1993
Faith in a Seed / Henry D. Thoreau.
Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1993.
This volume contains the first publication of Thoreau's last manuscript, The Dispersion of Seeds which describes ecological succession of plant species through seed dispersal and refutes the theory, accepted at the time, of a spontaneous life of plants independent of seeds, cuttings, or roots.
Other works contained in the volume are Thoreau's Wild Fruits, Weeds and Grasses, and Forest Trees. The book also includes margin illustrations, a chronology of Thoreau, editor's notes, and an index.

Pub. QP624 .E34 1998
Francis Crick & James Watson and the Building Blocks of Life / Edward Edelson.
New York; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.
Crick and Watson, names forever linked in the minds of the world, were involved in one of the most important scientific discoveries of all times. They were the first to describe the structure of DNA, and in so doing set off scientific discovery that has led to the detection of diseases caused by genes and even cloning. This book is a biography of both men, as well as a history of modern molecular biology. It also includes what happened to the men after 1953, the time of their groundbreaking work.
The book also includes a list of further reading, an index, and a chronology.

Pub. GB661.2 .P54 1998
Fresh Water / E. C. Pielou.
Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1998.
Fresh Water is an examination of the role of non-saltwater in the natural world. The book begins with the water cycle, without which, life as we know it could not exist. Each type of fresh water is given a different section. The sections include water below the ground, flowing water, rivers at work, lakes, water in the atmosphere, and ice.
The volume makes a point of focusing on the importance of fresh water along with descriptions of habitat and location. The book includes charts, graphs, illustrations, notes, and an index.

Pub. GB1203.7 .G54 2000
The Gift of Rivers: True Stories of Life on the Water / Edited by Pamela Michael.
San Francisco, CA: Travelers' Tales, 2000.
This book is comprised of individual essays from a mix of fiction writers, nature writers, and more. Each of the essays examines the authors experiences on a river of the world. Isabel Allende writes of the Amazon River in Brazil, and others tackle the Mississippi, Ganges, Yangtze, and many others. All of the essays are nonfiction accounts of personal experiences with the rivers in question.
Also included in the volume are a selection of recommended readings, contact information for river organizations, an index of contributors, and a general index.

Pub. L737 .C27 R87 2000
Grizzly Country / Andy Russell.
New York: The Lyons Press, 2000.
The author, a noted naturalist and wildlife photographer, introduces this reissue of his work. In it, he details his travels through bear country, observing the grizzly, his habitat, and his natural history. It is very clear that he has a strong respect for the bear, and he uses the book to help refute myth and legend that surround the "ferocious" grizzly.

Pub. E169.04 .P32 1999
The Heart of America: Our Landscape, Our Future / Tim Palmer.
Washington, D.C.: Shearwater Press, 1999.
This volume is an exploration and assessment of the American landscape. Geography, history, and ecology are woven together to form ideas on how landscapes can be protected and restored. The author also examines the ways in which the American landscape has shaped the American people.
Each area is given separate treatment, from mountains, to forest, to grassland, to deserts, to rivers, to lakes and wetlands, to seashores. Through the reading, we discover how we feel about the habitats and look at our own perceptions.

Pub. RC649 .K75 2000
Hormonal Chaos: The Scientific and Social Origins of the Environmental Endocrine Hypothesis / Sheldon Krimsky.
Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000.
The author, a professor in the Department of Urban and Environmental Policy at Tufts University, examines the environmental endocrine hypothesis. The book shows how the hypothesis, an assertion that certain chemicals interfere with the functions of hormones in animals and humans, was reached by scientists doing research independent of each other. The science behind and the responses to the hypothesis are also discussed. The book also traces the route from science, to media, to politics.
Also included in the volume are a chronology of key events, notes by chapter, references, and an index.

Pub. QL467 .M396 2000
Insects, Spiders, and Other Terrestrial Arthropods / George C. McGavin.
New York: Dorling Kindersley, 2000.
If you want to identify an insect, you might want to start with this fantastic recognition guide to insects, spiders, and land arthropods. Photos and illustrations are provided for more than 500 species. Start with the practical identification key to main groups to find the proper section, then find your specific entry.
Each entry has a concise description, annotated photographs or illustrations to highlight physical features, information on life cycle, habitat, and larval stages.

Pub. QE721.2 .S7 G44 1999
In Search of Deep Time: Beyond the Fossil Record to a New History of Life / Henry Gee.
New York: The Free Press, 1999.
The chief science writer for Nature, the author has set out to examine and clarify a revolution occurring in the field of paleontology: cladistics. Cladistics looks at the patter of history of life, but does so without assuming knowledge of how that history evolved. The cladistic analysis being used today involves a comparison and measurement of genetic and anatomic variation between species.
Spending time with scientists in both the field and the lab, the author examines and explains the use of cladistics, and how it is changing the ways that scientists view the past, present, and future.

Pub. QC981.8 .G56 P48 1998
Is the Temperature Rising: The Uncertain Science of Global Warming / S. George Philander.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998.
A professor of geosciences at Princeton University, the author attempts to help the public gain an appreciation for how human activity, technology, and creation is, to a significant degree, changing the chemistry of the Earth's atmosphere. Geosciences integrates aspects of geology, biology, meteorology, and oceanography to answer questions about the Earth. Geosciences are used in the book to provide an introduction to basics about the Earth's climate and weather.
Along with the main sections of the book, a glossary, references, an index, charts, graphs, images, and thirteen appendices cover topics as diverse as the cycle of seasons, the ozone hole, and global warming.

Pub. QP82 .A75 2000
Life at the Extremes: The Science of Survival / Frances Ashcroft.
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2000.
The author, a professor of physiology at Oxford University, has put together a fascinating account on the possibilities and limitations of the human body in a variety of habitats and situations. She takes us underwater, the tops of mountains, Antarctica, harsh desert, and even outer space. In her examination of the body, she uses actual situations, some her own, to introduce and illustrate her physiological explanations.
It is not every book that could examine frostbite, mountain sickness, the bends, and extreme temperatures and make it appealing to the general reader. Ashcroft has managed this admirably. The book also contains notes by chapter, selected references, and an index.

Pub. GA105.3 .W49 2000
The Mapmakers. Revised Edition / John Noble Wilford.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2000.
Two time Pulitzer Prize winning science correspondent John Noble Wilford has written for the New York Times since 1965. This book is an updated version of his classic on the history of cartography. He takes us on a journey from stick and twig maps, to the mention of an illustrative map in a 1020 b.c. Chinese document, to the mapping of planets other than our own.
Along the way, he talks about how map making likely evolved independently among various cultures and peoples around the globe. When Cook made it to Tahiti, the indigenous people he found there were already familiar with maps. He also discusses how increases in the sophistication and technology of maps has been used to create more and more detailed maps for centuries, including the current use of the Global Positioning System designed by the Pentagon and now used by civilians, as well. The book contains bibliographical notes by chapter, maps and images, and an index.

Pub. QL31 .N23 J644 1999
Nabokov's Blues: The Scientific Odyssey of a Literary Genius / Kurt Johnson and Steve Coates.
Cambridge, MA: Zoland Books, 1999.
While this book is partly a biography of Nabokov, the writer perhaps best known for his work Lolita, it is also a chronicle of his work as an informally taught lepidopterist. In the 1940's Nabokov was holding a post as a curator at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology. During this period of time, he published a radical new classification of Blues, butterflies from a little studied area of South America. The article was forgotten by many, but after fifty years, some scientists decided to take up where Nabokov had left off, and they traveled to South America and found that he was right!
The book includes a list of Nabokov's eight scientific publications on Blues published between 1941 and 1954 and the major publications that are completing his work on the neo-tropical Blues. The volume also includes a general bibliography and an index.

Pub. QL737 .C22 B365 1998
The New Wolves: The Return of the Mexican Wolf to the American Southwest / Nick Bass.
New York: The Lyons Press, 1998.
These wolves once roamed freely through Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. They were one of the most commonly distributed carnivores in the world, and now they are among the rarest. They have been hunted almost to extinction, with a surviving population mostly contained in zoos. This book is a chronicle of disappearance, research, land and land-use, ranchers and ranching, and government policies that affect the wolves. It also allows the reader to learn about some of the individual wolves that were eventually released, including, in the "Epilogue," the first known birth of a Mexican wolf pup in the wild in the US in over fifty years.

Pub. GV783 .R58 1997
Rivers Running Free: A Century of Women's Canoeing Adventures / Edited by Judith Niemi and Barb Wieser.
Seattle, WA: Seal Press, 1997.
These journals, stories, and essays are by and about women canoeing. They cover first experiences, reminiscences, hardships, joys, and adventure. The selections are divided into five sections. "The Companions of Her Days" includes stories of women finding joy and strength in each other. First time trips, hard trips, purposefully taken challenges, and wilderness skills and life lessons are covered in the section "The Whitewater of Life." Stories about non-wilderness canoeing are shared in "Urban Wilds." "The Very Poetry of Travel" takes us on a journey of words that create images of the trips. The final section, "Listening," reminds the reader that it's all taking place in nature, and that women need to listen to themselves, as well.

Pub. F787 .C47 2000
The Secret Knowledge of Water: Discovering the Essence of the American Desert / Craig Childs.
Seattle, WA: Sasquatch Books, 2000.
As the book tells you, "There are two easy ways to die in the desert: thirst or drowning." The book examines this dichotomy by exploring the meaning of water in a dry place. The book attempts to discover the essence of water in the desert of the American west.
The work includes a bibliography and an index.

Pub. QH366.2 .S492 2000
Shaking the Tree: Readings from Nature in the History of Life / Edited by Henry Gee.
Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2000.
Edited by a senior editor at Nature, this book contains nineteen review articles, previously published in Nature, on the history of life on Earth. The articles were written over the last ten years by leading figures in evolution and paleontology, they serve to remind that science is not a static discipline. Science, like life, evolves and changes. Scientists passionately defend their theories.
The collection is divided into five parts. Each portion is introduced by Gee and contains updated references. An index is also included.

Pub. DS566.2 .C86 1998
Thailand's Islands & Beaches / Joe Cummings and Nicko Goncharoff. Melbourne, Australia; Oakland, CA: Lonely Planet Publications, 1998.

Just your average Lonely Planet book, which means its ahead of all the others and a fantastic resource. The guide contains facts about the country, including history and information about the 1991 coup, information regarding geography, climate, ecology, government, economy, population and people, arts, and religion. A handy feature is the language section, which includes common phrases that you would find handy while traveling in Thailand.
The Facts for Visitors portion of the guide includes tips on what to pack, how to get there, and how to get around once you've arrived. Sections about food, including a food glossary, are exceptionally handy. Where are you going to stay? How do you handle money issues? What should you see while you're there? All these questions, and many that you would never think to ask, are answered in this guidebook.
Also included are maps, a glossary, an index, and some color photographs. Bangkok and other destinations are treated to in-depth coverage.

Pub. QE821 .F67 2000
Trilobite! Eyewitness to Evolution / Richard Fortey. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2000.

This book contains the story of the beginning of life as seen through the eyes of a trilobite. Through study of the trilobite, the reader is given a picture of the geologic past and how the trilobite can reveal the patterns and mechanisms of evolution through their fossils.
The author, a senior palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in London, has written an accessible, entertaining, and educational book. The volume contains an index, suggestions for further reading, plates, and illustrations.

Pub. QH83 .T84 2000
The Variety of Life: A Survey and a Celebration of All the Creatures That Have Ever Lived / Colin Tudge. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.

The Variety of Life attempts to introduce all the principle groups of creatures that are now believed to have existed on Earth. The very detailed book is meant to be an introductory text on the true implications of biodiversity and the ways in which biologists try to come to terms with it. The author believes that the book can be used as a reader's guide from no knowledge of the subject to the ability to begin to understand the scientific journals on the subject by providing background and context.
Part one of the book is on "The Craft and Science of Classification." Part two, the main portion of the volume, is "A Survey of All Living Creatures." The volume contains charts, graphs, illustrations, literature cited and further readings, a general index, and an index of organisms.

Pub. QH105 .A65 B63 2000
The View from Bald Hill: Thirty Years in an Arizona Grassland / Carl E. Bock and Jane H. Bock.
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2000.
Professors of Biology at the University of Colorado, the authors have worked for years at "the Ranch," an area that has been closed to grazing since 1968. The book summarizes the results of thirty years of grassland research in an ungrazed area. The book is about grassland ecology, and it becomes readily apparent how important it is to study when you realize that native grassland, historically one of the largest biomes in North America, is now endangered.
The research area is located on the Sonoita Plain in the high plains of south eastern Arizona. Active grazing likely began in the 1880s, and lasted through 1968 when the land was donated for research. The central question of the book is how has does the ungrazed land differ from the surrounding operating cattle ranches after thirty years without livestock.
Scientific and common names of plants and animals, notes by chapter, literature cited, and an index are included.

Pub. GF504 .W35 S56 1999
Visions of Paradise: Glimpses of Our Landscape's Legacy / John Warfield Simpson.
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1999.
This book attempts to examine the forces that have shaped the American landscape since 1776. Beginning with a comparison of the lives of two very different men -- a grown man and self-made millionaire moving to the Midwest after making his fortune and a child who was taken captive by a tribe of Native Americans and chose to stay with them in the same area of the Midwest -- the author uses their vastly different experiences to trace the transformation of the Midwest and West from wilderness, to farm land, to suburban and then urban sprawl.
The book also examines the policies and philosophies that led to the mass movement west and settlement, and the ways we feel about that land. By inserting his own experiences, the author manages to personalize the stories.

Pub. QL737 .C22 T43 1998
Wolf County: Eleven Years Tracking the Algonquin Wolves / John B. Theberge with Mary T. Theberge.
Toronto, Ontario: McClelland & Stewart Inc., 1998.
This book is a product of a long-running wolf study, 1987-1998, in the Algonquin Provincial Park, a world-famous wolf sanctuary. The book provides information on wolf natural history, wolf habitat, and individual wolves. By bringing the wolves to life in his writing, Theberge has given us all access to the wild.
The book includes a bibliography and an index.

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CHILDREN'S BOOKS

Pub. Juv QL338 . A69 2000
Australian Animals / Caroline Arnold.
New York: HarperCollins, 2000.
Join me on a tour of the island continent's fantastic and amazing animals in this great book. Clearly written text accompanied by large color photographs illustrate the animals at home in their habitats. In fact the book is separated by habitat, with animals in like habitats grouped together, showing niches, and using maps to help you figure out where these animals occur in the wild. All of your favorites are in the book, including the kangaroo, koala, and platypus, but don't forget to learn about quolls, sugar gliders, bilbies, and the world's smallest penguins, only 15 inches tall!

Pub. Juv GB601.2 .S53 2000
Cave / Text by Diane Siebert and illustrations by Wayne McLoughlin.
New York: HarperCollins, 2000.
Beautiful illustrations and elegant text are featured in this book that describes and illustrates the formation of a limestone cave. How the cave was formed, the life that evolved to live in the cave, and a sense of wonder are all conveyed gracefully.

Pub. Juv QE862 .D5 A39 1989
Dinosaur Days in Texas / Tom Allen, Jane D. Allen, and Savannah Waring Walker.
Dallas, TX: Hendrick-Long Publishing Co., 1989.
Dinosaurs may not have lived in California, but they sure lived in Texas! In this book, you can find out about the fossil remains and footprints that scientists have studied in Texas.
Lots of maps, charts, graphs, and illustrations are featured as you find out about the science of studying dinosaurs and learn about the species that lived in Texas so many years ago.

Pub. Juv QA95 .P472 2001
Math Trek 2 / Ivars Peterson and Nancy Henderson.
New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2001.
Play games and solve puzzles to learn math and math skills in this entertaining book. Use Pascal's triangle, rope, and tic-tac-toe to learn and have fun at the same time!
The book contains clear instructions, a glossary, further readings, an index, and illustrations.

Pub. Juv PS3563 .O622 P63 1997
Poems have Roots / Lilian Moore.
New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 1997.
Along with the seventeen poems about or influenced by nature that are presented in this volume, a fantastic feature of this work is the section of notes located at the end. The notes describe the scenes, settings, and events that inspired the poems. The poem "Frogs are Disappearing," for instance, was inspired by the author hearing about the mysterious disappearance of frogs in Yellowstone National Park, a protected environment.

Pub. Juv QL676.2 .J64 1996
Simon & Schuster Children's Guide to Birds / Jinny Johnson.
New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.
Beautiful and colorful illustrations are a highlight of this book. Along with an explanation about what a bird is, the information is divided into sections on ground birds and game birds, seabirds, waterbirds and cranes, wading birds, owls and birds of prey, birds of the trees and masters of the air, and songbirds. Each section then provides information about how the birds live, where they live, the kinds of birds that fit the categories, including scientific names and range, and places a spotlight on one of the species within the group.

Pub. Juv PS3515 .U274 S94 1994
The Sweet and Sour Animal Book / Langston Hughes.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1994.
The text in this volume is from previously unpublished verse by Langston Hughes, while the illustrations have been provided by mostly 1st, 2nd, and 3rd graders at Harlem School for the Arts. The work was found among his papers, and has been published with gorgeous and colorful illustrations of such animals as apes, elephants, kittens, newts, turtles, and zebras.

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MULTIMEDIA/AUDIO VISUAL

Pub. AV&M QL737 .P95 L45 1999
Lemurs with John Cleese. Burbank, CA: PBS Home Video, 1999.

John Cleese adores lemurs. In fact, he likes them so much that he not only raised money to send five lemurs raised in captivity, the Carolina Five, to the wild, he was willing to travel to the rainforests of Madagascar without a spot of tea in sight to see how they were fairing five months later. The video follows John Cleese as he spends time at a private lemur reserve and meets a variety of different species and specializations of lemur. We see the Aye-aye, the largest nocturnal primate, and watch as he uses his specially adapted finger to remove grubs from bamboo. We're also treated to the glorious sights and sounds of John Cleese, as he learns about lemurs, and teaches us a thing or two in the process.

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CURRICULUM

No titles in December.

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This page will not be complete until the end of December. Please check back for more materials and reviews.


 

 

 

 

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Last update: December 29, 2000.