British Sea Birds.

By Charles Dixon

Printed: 1896

Publisher: Bliss Sands & Foster. London

Dimensions 16 × 22 × 4 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 16 x 22 x 4

£18.00
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Item information

Description

Green cloth binding with gilt title and gull on the spine. Gilt title and penguin picture on the front board.

F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feel and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.
A nice clean copy

Laypersons tour of British Seabirds including their appearance, habits and breeding patterns.

Charles Edward Dixon was a world-famous naturalist, particularly well known for his work in ornithology. He was born in Camden Town, Middlesex [now London] in 1858, the son of landscape artist Charles Thomas Dixon and Louisa (nee Edwards) Dixon, but moved to Sheffield at a young age. He became a pupil teacher at age 12, but was not interested in teaching the required curriculum, but preferred to focus on natural history – particularly ornithology. At the time, biology was considered to be a distraction rather than a serious subject to study.

Dixon was often to be found perched on the branches of trees or entangled in bushes, with his nose in a book. This propensity for studying in precarious positions continued throughout his life. The prefix of one of his books “Our Rarer Birds” states that it was written from the nest of an eagle on the Isle of Skye. Dixon’s love of ornithology led him to work with another celebrated ornithologist, Henry Seebohm. Dixon travelled the country with the older man, leading to their discovery of the St Kilda Wren in 1884. The two had co-authored A History of British Birds in 1883. Dixon also worked with Alfred Russell Wallace, who in turn had previously worked on and co-authored the theory of evolution by natural selection with Charles Darwin. Wallace and Dixon were both interested in the migration patterns of birds and co-authored several papers on the subject. Dixon donated over 100 skins of birds to Sheffield Museums during the latter part of the 19th century.
Charles Dixon also wrote a Science Fiction novel, Fifteen Hundred Miles an Hour. Charles Edward Dixon died in 1926.

Condition notes

Binding faded

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