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Word: ornithologist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

Warmly bundled up against the winter wind, an amateur ornithologist snooped around the shore line of Long Island last week to see what the scum of oil from torpedoed tankers was doing to the wild fowl. Oil is bad for ducks. It gets into their feathers and feed, makes them sick, keeps them from flying. The birdman was relieved to see only one miserable, oil-smeared duck...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: Ducks & Men | 3/9/1942 | See Source »

Throughout his long career Allen had been a well known ornithologist and mammalogist. He was the author of many books and scientific papers, including "Bats" and "Birds and Their Attributes." He had been an assistant to Roy Chapman Andrews in preparing the scientific results of the Asiatic expeditions of the American Museum of Natural History...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor of Zoology Allen Dies Saturday | 2/16/1942 | See Source »

...ivory-billed woodpecker, rarest of U. S. birds, was considered extinct about 1926. But in the latest issue of Audubon Magazine Ornithologist James Taylor Tanner of Cornell estimated that some four & twenty of these birds still live in the loneliest swamps of Louisiana, Florida and South Carolina. Biggest U. S. woodpecker, the ivory-bill once ranged the southern primeval forest, eating larvae from recently dead trees. As the forest dwindled, so did the ivorybill, and Tanner gives it only a slim chance of surviving...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Sad Birds | 3/17/1941 | See Source »

Every year for four years Ornithologist Charles E. Gillham of the Biological Survey in Washington has trekked into northern Canada, to ask natives questions about the Ross's goose. It was suspected that their breeding ground was somewhere near the mouth of the Perry River, which runs into the Arctic Ocean at Queen Maud Gulf, southeast of big Victoria Island. Last summer Gillham chartered a plane, flew over the Perry River region, saw so many of the birds that he was certain the breeding grounds were there. But floating ice in the bay prevented a landing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: The Scabby-Nosed Wavey | 12/16/1940 | See Source »

...gave "in fiction form the actual facts of an animal's life and modes of thought." Many doubted this, and a great controversy over "the Nature Fakers" began in 1904 when John Burroughs, in The Atlantic Monthly, abused Seton and his disciples as frauds and phony naturalists. Ornithologist Chapman, Novelist Hamlin Garland, Sportsman Teddy Roosevelt defended Seton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Blazings | 11/25/1940 | See Source »

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