The fate of the elephant

Bibliographic Information

The fate of the elephant

Douglas H. Chadwick

(Penguin books)

Penguin Books, 1994, c1992

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

First published in the USA: San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1992

Includes bibliographical references (p. 477-479) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Largest of all beasts that dwell on land, elephants can uproot trees or topple the huts of a village. They have the power to communicate in a language of subsonic frequencies, snorkel across the open sea between islands, care for their wounded and mourn their dead. Asian elephants were domesticated more than 4,000 years ago and, like their African cousins (whose numbers have been halved each decade since the 1970s), they face extinction through an over-whelming loss of habitat. In this book, Douglas Chadwick provides a comprehensive exploration of the natural history and modern fate of the world's elephants, centred around the theme that "we are discovering a creature greater in many ways - and more like us - than we had ever imagined it to be even as we are destroying it." The book blends field biology with personal observation. It looks behind the headlines, he covers the "ivory wars" in East Africa and elsewhere.

Table of Contents

  • Siberia
  • first touch
  • the past
  • East Africa - Amboseli
  • East Africa - Tsavo
  • Central Africa - Bangui
  • Central Africa - Bayanga
  • Japan
  • Hong Kong
  • India - Theppakadu
  • India - Mudumalai Sanctuary
  • Switzerland
  • Thailand
  • Malaysia
  • Southern Africa - Zimbabwe
  • a future.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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