biography
| name: |
Peterson, Roger Tory
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1908–96)
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| biography:
| Ornithologist, born in Jamestown, New York, USA. He began observing and drawing birds as a boy, and pursued an artist's education in New York City at the Art Students League and the National Academy of Design. He taught art and science in Brookline, MA for several years before publishing his Field Guide to the Birds of Eastern North America in 1934. With its novel and easy-for-the-novice pointers on how to identify birds, this guide became a major best-seller. It also helped him obtain a job with the National Audubon Society, and he became art editor for Audubon magazine (1934–43). During World War 2, the Army Air Force adapted his bird-spotting methods to aircraft identification. From the late 1940s he edited a series of field guides, lectured, and continued to publish his own works, among them Birds over America (1948), How to Know the Birds (1949), and A Bird Watcher's Anthology (1957). Wild America (1957), written in collaboration with James Fisher, was an account of a journey along the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts from Maine to Alaska. His guides and other work gave him wide influence in building popular awareness of wildlife conservation and environmental protection, and in 1986 he founded the Roger Tory Peterson Institute for the Study of Natural History. |
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