
The Natural History of Birds
From the French of the Count de Buffon; Illustrated with Engravings, and a Preface, Notes, and Additions, by the Translator
Cambridge University Press
Published on 25. November 2010
Book
Paperback/Softback
540 pages
978-1-108-02305-4 (ISBN)
Description
Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (1707-88) was a French mathematician who was considered one of the leading naturalists of the Enlightenment. An acquaintance of Voltaire and other intellectuals, he worked as Keeper at the Jardin du Roi from 1739, and this inspired him to research and publish a vast encyclopaedia and survey of natural history, the ground-breaking Histoire Naturelle, which he published in forty-four volumes between 1749 and 1804. These volumes, first published between 1770 and 1783 and translated into English in 1793, contain Buffon's survey and descriptions of birds from the Histoire Naturelle. Based on recorded observations of birds both in France and in other countries, these volumes provide detailed descriptions of various bird species, their habitats and behaviours and were the first publications to present a comprehensive account of eighteenth-century ornithology. Volume 8 covers domestic and foreign marine birds.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
39 Plates, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 32 mm
Weight
753 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-108-02305-4 (9781108023054)
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Complete work / Part of the work

Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon
The Natural History of Birds 9 Volume Paperback Set
From the French of the Count de Buffon; Illustrated with Engravings, and a Preface, Notes, and Additions, by the Translator
Book
11/2010
Cambridge University Press
€530.35
Article is exhausted, reprint undefined
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Content
1. The ibis; 2. The curlews; 3. The lapwing; 4. The plovers; 5. The pluvian; 6. The great plover; 7. The long-shank; 8. The oyster-catcher; 9. The swift-runner; 10. The turn-stone; 11. The water-ouzel; 12. The water-thrush; 13. The knot; 14. The rails; 15. The caurale; 16. The water-hen; 17. The little water-hen; 18. The porzana, or the great water-hen; 19. The grinetta; 20. The smirring; 21. The glout; 22. The jacana; 23. The sultana hen, or porphyrion; 24. The common coot; 25. The crested coot; 26. The phalaropes; 27. The grebe; 28. The chesnut; 29. The divers; 30. The merganser; 31. The pelican; 32. The cormorant; 33. The shag; 34. The sea swallows; 35. The tropic bird; 36. The boobies; 37. The gannet; 38. The frigat; 39. The gulls and the mews; 40. The labbe, or dung-bird; 41. The long-tailed labbe; 42. The anhinga; 43. The rufous anhinga; 44. The shearbill; 45. The noddy; 46. The avocet; 47. The runner; 48. The red flamingo.