Citizen Scientist: Searching for Heroes and Hope in an Age of Extinction

# Citizen Scientist: Searching for Heroes and Hope in an Age of Extinction ✓ PDF Download by ^ Mary Ellen Hannibal eBook or Kindle ePUB Online free. Citizen Scientist: Searching for Heroes and Hope in an Age of Extinction encore! By way of full disclosure, I am acquainted with the author, being a fellow citizen scientist involved with the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory. While the author and I do not work on the same Hawkwatch team, we have met on a few occasions.I worried through the first fifty or so pages that the book might be a touch too basic, but it turned out that the book got better and better the more deeply into it I read. I suspect that this may have been a strategy to make the book accessible to a gen

Citizen Scientist: Searching for Heroes and Hope in an Age of Extinction

Author :
Rating : 4.24 (884 Votes)
Asin : 1615193987
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 432 Pages
Publish Date : 2016-11-15
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

encore! By way of full disclosure, I am acquainted with the author, being a fellow citizen scientist involved with the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory. While the author and I do not work on the same Hawkwatch team, we have met on a few occasions.I worried through the first fifty or so pages that the book might be a touch too basic, but it turned out that the book got better and better the more deeply into it I read. I suspect that this may have been a strategy to make the book accessible to a general audience less familiar with conservation science. Regardless, Hannibal probes into conservation issues in i. Chris Carlsson said Beautiful writing, great insight, a page turner and very illuminating and meditative at the same time!. Mary Ellen Hannibal’s book Citizen Scientist goes much further than its title would suggest, including an excellent history of the San Francisco-based Academy of Science, and a great deal of rumination on earlier projects that featured non-scientists doing science, notably the Ed Ricketts and John Steinbeck trip to the Sea of Cortez in the 19Beautiful writing, great insight, a page turner and very illuminating and meditative at the same time! Chris Carlsson Mary Ellen Hannibal’s book Citizen Scientist goes much further than its title would suggest, including an excellent history of the San Francisco-based Academy of Science, and a great deal of rumination on earlier projects that featured non-scientists doing science, notably the Ed Ricketts and John Steinbeck trip to the Sea of Cortez in the 1940s. Much of our contemporary view of nature and wild life is rooted in 19th century sensibilities, that are in turn heavily influenced by Charles Darwin and his contemporaries. Tracing the influences on Ricketts back to his time at the University of Chi. 0s. Much of our contemporary view of nature and wild life is rooted in 19th century sensibilities, that are in turn heavily influenced by Charles Darwin and his contemporaries. Tracing the influences on Ricketts back to his time at the University of Chi. Fascinating storytelling, beautiful writing, new insights As someone who has been participating in citizen science for the past four years and environmental science for over 20 years, I was eager to read Mary Ellen Hannibal's new book, Citizen Scientist. I know Mary Ellen's writing from Spine of the Continent and Bay Nature Magazine and of her intellect and thought leadership as a speaker and panel moderator for important environmental topics.Reading Citizen Scientist will take you on a journey. The journey does not start right away, but when it does, you will know it. And the experience gets richer as you go on. Throughout the book I admired Mary Ellen

Fortunately for us, Mary Ellen Hannibal locates some luminous souls who, by the light of their knowledge and determination, can lead us out of these dark times for life on Earth.”—Carl Safina, author of Beyond Words; What Animals Think and Feel “What an extraordinary book!  Mary Ellen Hannibal weaves together natural history, cutting-edge technology, and her own adventures into a story that is certain to inspire.”—Amy Stewart, author of The Drunken Botanist “An informative, emotional, and fascinating account of a personal journey to ecological citizen science.”—Muki Haklay, co-director of Extreme Citizen S

Prompted by her novelist father’s sudden death, she also examines her own past and discovers a family legacy of looking closely at the world. But is there really hope for threatened species? Mary Ellen Hannibal needed to find out. Hannibal, an award-winning writer and emerging emissary from scientists to the public, sets out to become a citizen scientist herself. Combining research and memoir in impassioned prose, Citizen Scientist is a literary event, a blueprint for action, and the story of how one woman rescues herself from an odyssey of loss—with a new kind of science.. Citizen science might just be our last, best chance to fight extinction. The data she collects will help environmental research—but her most precious discovery might be her fellow citizen scientists: a heroic cast of volunteers devoting long hours to helping scientists measure—and even slow—today’s unprecedented mass extinction. A consummate reporter, Hannibal digs into the origins of the tech-savvy citizen science movement—tracing it back through centuries of amateur observation by writers and naturalists. Her personal loss only fuels her quest to bear witness to life, and so she ultimately returns her gaze to the wealth of species still left to fight for. In search of vanishing species, she wades into tide pools, follows hawks, and scours mountains

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