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Naturalist and Aldo
Naturalist Aldo Leopold produced a plan for preserving the tract in 1938.

Naturalist and species
Saunderson's arguments are those of a Neo-Spinozist, Naturalist, and Fatalist, using a sophisticated notion of the self-generation and natural evolution of species without Creation or supernatural intervention.
Naturalist Paul R. Ehrlich wrote that the Passenger Pigeon's extinction " illustrates a very important principle of conservation biology: it is not always necessary to kill the last pair of a species to force it to extinction.
* The Shamrock: A Further attempt to fix its species, by Nathaniel Colgan, published in the Irish Naturalist 1893 on the From Ireland web site.

Naturalist and at
The fin-de-siècle world in which this Pierrot resided was clearly at odds with the reigning American Realist and Naturalist aesthetic ( though such figures as Ambrose Bierce and John LaFarge were mounting serious challenges to it ).
Naturalist Madhaviah Krishnan on the other hand once famously took offense at ipé grown in India, where it is not native.
Originally, the definition for relatedness ( r ) in Hamilton's rule was explicitly given as Sewall Wright's coefficient of relationship: the probability that at a random locus, the alleles there will be identical by descent ( Hamilton 1963, American Naturalist, p. 355 ).
Naturalist Sir Joseph Banks ( 1743 – 1820 ) was laid to rest at St Leonard's Church.
Their time at the farm named Trail Wood is chronicled in Teale's book A Naturalist Buys an Old Farm ( 1974 ).
Although newspapers at the time reported Blair's accusations uncritically, with headlines such as " Naturalist was cruel ", modern biographers consider it more likely that Blair resorted to hyperbole in order to make a case for divorce.
Brown was less widely read at the end of the 19th century, when prevailing Realist and Naturalist literary styles obscured most fiction of Brown's era.
Wakayama was a Naturalist tanka poet who was active at the beginning of the 20th century, during the tanka revival started by Yosano Tekkan.
* Naturalist George Montagu ( 1753 – 1815 ), after whom the bird Montagu's Harrier was named, lived before his death at Knowle House, Kingsbridge, having been born in Wiltshire.
After his death, he was at first forgotten, but his work was rediscovered by the Naturalist and Expressionist dramatists.
In 1877 he purchased half the rights to the American Naturalist to publish the papers he produced at a rate so high that Marsh questioned their dating.
Lithograph after the watercolor: Lesueur, the Naturalist at New Harmony by Karl Bodmer.
According to the New Naturalist website only 217 were actually sold and the remaining unsold stock is being kept secure at HarperCollins's offices.
* Biography of Kennicott at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Division of Fishes page on Naturalist Collectors
Collections made by the Company's Naturalist at Fort St. George, consisting of specimens of Mammalia, Birds, and Insects.
There have been 109 Summits since 1970, with notable environmental educators, naturalists, authors, and artists such as Robert Michael Pyle, Jim Halfpenny, Roger Tory Peterson, Clare Walker Leslie, Annie Tiberio Cameron, and NWF 33-year employee and Chief Naturalist Craig Tufts ( 1946 – 2009 ) all on faculty at many Summits.
Naturalist at Large.
It scarcely admitted-in theory at least-any exceptions to the rule ; thus it limited itself to depicting common existence, and struggled, under the pretext of being true to life, to create characters who would be as close as possible to the average run of mankind. Huysmans decided to keep certain features of the Naturalist style, such as its use of minutely documented realistic detail, but apply them instead to a portrait of an exceptional individual: the protagonist Jean Des Esseintes.
Along with better than 400 scholarly articles, Barbour wrote several books including the autobiographical Naturalist at Large ( 1943 ), Naturalist in Cuba ( 1945 ), A Naturalist's Scrapbook ( 1946 ), and That Vanishing Eden ( 1944 ), which explores the natural world of a remote, undeveloped Florida.
Naturalist at Large.
Robert Templeton ( 1802 – 1892 ) was a Naturalist, artist, and entomologist, and was born at Cranmore House, Belfast, Ireland.
* The Naturalist at Law 16
* The Naturalist at Law 16

Naturalist and Park
< em > Victorian Naturalist </ em >, < strong > 115 </ strong >, 132 – 134 .</ ref >), Mount Bogong – Mount Higginbotham / Mount Hotham ( Victoria ) and Kosciuszko National Park ( New South Wales ),< ref > Broome, L. S.
He was the first Chief Naturalist and first Chief Forester of the United States National Park Service.
From 1920 to 1923, Hall served as the first Park Naturalist of Yosemite National Park, where he established innovative interpretative programs, founded the Yosemite Museum Association, made geological models and native crafts, mounted natural history specimens, and edited the seminal Handbook of Yosemite National Park, published in 1921.
* 1923 – 1930: Chief Naturalist of the National Park Service.
* 1923 – 1933: Chief Forester and Senior Naturalist of the National Park Service.
He joined the National Park Service ( NPS ) in 1923 as a Naturalist in Yosemite National Park.
Dr. Russell served in several regional positions in the NPS, including NPS Chief Naturalist of Yosemite ( 1923 – 1929 ), regional director, and Yosemite National Park Superintendent.

Naturalist and which
As a young man, Cope read Charles Darwin's Voyage of a Naturalist, which had little effect on him.
He described a number of birds for the first time, many in the Victorian Naturalist, the magazine of the Field Naturalists Club of Victoria of which he was a founding member.
His personal interest in the subject led to a radio series called The Naturalist, which began on the Home Service in 1946 and proved an immediate success, later augmented by ' Out of Doors and Birds in Britain.
He worked on a number of articles, three of which became books: Alexander Wilson: Naturalist and Pioneer ( 1961 ), The Real McCoy ( 1971 ), and The Hidden Northwest ( 1972 ).
He wrote about these years in A Naturalist in Indian Seas ( 1902 ) which is considered a classic in natural history travel.
In his own short story collections in the 1880s, Levertin first aligned himself with the Naturalist school of fiction of which August Strindberg was the most prominent member.
He also wrote a notable Essay on the History of the names Cambrian and Silurian ( Canadian Naturalist, 1872 ), in which the claims of Sedgwick, with respect to the grouping of the Cambrian strata, were forcibly advocated.

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