Home
nav menu top frame
Navigation Menu To the Homepage Contact Us Authors Frequently Asked Questions About Us Articles Categories Specials and Sales

William Sargent

William Sargent
William Sargent is a consultant for the NOVA Science Series and has written six books about science and the environment, including Storm Surge: A Coastal Village Battles the Rising Atlantic and The Year of the Crab: Marine Animals in Modern Medicine. His Shallow Waters: A Year on Cape Cod’s Pleasant Bay received the Boston Globe Winship Award for the best book about New England and was the basis for a film selected by the National Audubon Society as the best natural history film of the year. Formerly Director of the Baltimore Aquarium and a research assistant at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, he presently reaches at The Briarwood Center for Marine Biology and at Harvard University.

Year in the Notch: Exploring the Natural History of the White Mountains
Hardcover
William Sargent
In the same format and style of his prize-winning Shallow Waters, William Sargent's latest book chronicles a year spent exploring the North Woods of New Hampshire. Through words and photographs, Sargent investigates a new area's geology, ecology, and natural history. Centered primarily in the Franconia Notch, the book also discusses Mount Washington Observatory, Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, Palermo Mine, and New Hampshire Audobon's Peregrine Tagging Program.

In a series of lyrical chapters, Sargent takes readers into vernalponds and moose yards, up mountain summits and into the dens of hibernating bears. He shows that the present pattern of evergreen and deciduous trees we think of as natural is actually the result of centuries of human alteration. Describing how humans have become the newest geophysical force shaping our planet, he ruminates on how well the earth's immune system can withstand the onslaught. Offering up-to-date science on the geology and biology of New England, A Year in the Notch explains the interaction between life, rocks, and water—the intricate dance that keeps our planet alive and makes our own existence possible.

Qty:
 
Specials | Categories | Articles | FAQs | Authors | Contact Us
About Us | Customer Service | Guest Book | Login

Having difficulties with the site?

WEBSITE DESIGN BY FCGNETWORKS