American Serengeti : The Last Big Animals of the Great Plains by Dan Flores (2016, Hardcover)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherUniversity Press of Kansas
ISBN-100700622276
ISBN-139780700622276
eBay Product ID (ePID)219144164

Product Key Features

Book TitleAmerican Serengeti : the Last Big Animals of the Great Plains
Number of Pages222 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicEnvironmental Science (See Also Chemistry / Environmental), Environmental Conservation & Protection, Animals / Wolves, Animals / Bears, Ecology, Animals / General, Regional, Endangered Species, Life Sciences / Zoology / General
Publication Year2016
IllustratorYes
GenreNature, Science
AuthorDan Flores
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height0.9 in
Item Weight16.9 Oz
Item Length9.3 in
Item Width6.2 in

Additional Product Features

LCCN2015-049990
Dewey Edition23
ReviewsA big and haunting history stuffed with big animals and big ideas that reveals the fragility and resilience of the Great Plains ecosystem over the past 10,000 years.-- Karl Jacoby , author of Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation " American Serengeti is Dan Flores'slove song to the Great Plains, with each verse a fond embrace of one of its own--grizzlies and bison, pronghorns and coyotes. Beautifully written, it strikes just the right note for those of us drawn to this magnificent part of America. For those yet to know it, this book is a loving invitation to come and see."-- Elliott West , author of The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado A highly personal book reflecting the vast knowledge of a leading cultural and environmental historian.-- David Dary , author of The Buffalo Book and True Tales of the Prairies and Plains Dan Flores has written an engaging and provocative account of ecological change in the Great Plains by tracing the interaction of the large animals and humans in this grassland during the past 13,000 years. This is a book worth reading by anyone interested in the history of the American West.-- R. Douglas Hurt , Head Fellow of the Agricultural History Society, Associate Fellow of the Center for Great Plains Studies "As sweeping and expansive as the Great Plains themselves, Dan Flores's American Serengeti is 'Big History' at its best. Personal, passionate, and scholarly, his essays on pronghorns, coyotes, horses, grizzly bears, bison, and wolves give these ancient, durable animals their historical due."-- Frank Van Nuys , author of Varmints and Victims: Predator Control in the American West, "Dan Flores has written an engaging and provocative account of ecological change in the Great Plains by tracing the interaction of the large animals and humans in this grassland during the past 13,000 years. This is a book worth reading by anyone interested in the history of the American West."- R. Douglas Hurt , Head Fellow of the Agricultural History Society, Associate Fellow of the Center for Great Plains Studies, "As sweeping and expansive as the Great Plains themselves, Dan Flores's American Serengeti is 'Big History' at its best. Personal, passionate, and scholarly, his essays on pronghorns, coyotes, horses, grizzly bears, bison, and wolves give these ancient, durable animals their historical due."- Frank Van Nuys , author of Varmints and Victims: Predator Control in the American West, "This book is well researched, topical, and beautifully written."-- Journal of American History "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lostvast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."H-Net Reviews "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lostvast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."H-Net Reviews, "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lost--vast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."-- Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."-- H-Net Reviews "An excellent work of environmental history."-- Chronicles of Oklahoma, "This book is well researched, topical, and beautifully written."-- Journal of American History "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."-- Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."-- Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."-- Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lost--vast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."-- Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."-- H-Net Reviews "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."-- Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."-- Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."-- Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lost--vast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."-- Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."-- H-Net Reviews, " American Serengeti is Dan Flores's love song to the Great Plains, with each verse a fond embrace of one of its own--grizzlies and bison, pronghorns and coyotes. Beautifully written, it strikes just the right note for those of us drawn to this magnificent part of America. For those yet to know it, this book is a loving invitation to come and see."- Elliott West , author of The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado, "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."-- Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."-- Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."-- Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lost--vast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."-- Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."-- H-Net Reviews, "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."- H-Net Reviews, "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lost--vast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."-- Choice, "A big and haunting history stuffed with big animals and big ideas that reveals the fragility and resilience of the Great Plains ecosystem over the past 10,000 years." - Karl Jacoby , author of Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation, "This book is well researched, topical, and beautifully written."Journal of American History "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lostvast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."H-Net Reviews "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lostvast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."H-Net Reviews, A big and haunting history stuffed with big animals and big ideas that reveals the fragility and resilience of the Great Plains ecosystem over the past 10,000 years.Karl Jacoby , author of Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation " American Serengeti is Dan Floresslove song to the Great Plains, with each verse a fond embrace of one of its owngrizzlies and bison, pronghorns and coyotes. Beautifully written, it strikes just the right note for those of us drawn to this magnificent part of America. For those yet to know it, this book is a loving invitation to come and see."Elliott West , author of The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado A highly personal book reflecting the vast knowledge of a leading cultural and environmental historian.David Dary , author of The Buffalo Book and True Tales of the Prairies and Plains Dan Flores has written an engaging and provocative account of ecological change in the Great Plains by tracing the interaction of the large animals and humans in this grassland during the past 13,000 years. This is a book worth reading by anyone interested in the history of the American West.R. Douglas Hurt , Head Fellow of the Agricultural History Society, Associate Fellow of the Center for Great Plains Studies "As sweeping and expansive as the Great Plains themselves, Dan Floress American Serengeti is Big Historyat its best. Personal, passionate, and scholarly, his essays on pronghorns, coyotes, horses, grizzly bears, bison, and wolves give these ancient, durable animals their historical due."Frank Van Nuys , author of Varmints and Victims: Predator Control in the American West, "A big and haunting history stuffed with big animals and big ideas that reveals the fragility and resilience of the Great Plains ecosystem over the past 10,000 years." - Karl Jacoby , author of Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation " American Serengeti is Dan Flores's love song to the Great Plains, with each verse a fond embrace of one of its own--grizzlies and bison, pronghorns and coyotes. Beautifully written, it strikes just the right note for those of us drawn to this magnificent part of America. For those yet to know it, this book is a loving invitation to come and see."- Elliott West , author of The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado "A highly personal book reflecting the vast knowledge of a leading cultural and environmental historian."- David Dary , author of The Buffalo Book and True Tales of the Prairies and Plains "Dan Flores has written an engaging and provocative account of ecological change in the Great Plains by tracing the interaction of the large animals and humans in this grassland during the past 13,000 years. This is a book worth reading by anyone interested in the history of the American West."- R. Douglas Hurt , Head Fellow of the Agricultural History Society, Associate Fellow of the Center for Great Plains Studies "As sweeping and expansive as the Great Plains themselves, Dan Flores's American Serengeti is 'Big History' at its best. Personal, passionate, and scholarly, his essays on pronghorns, coyotes, horses, grizzly bears, bison, and wolves give these ancient, durable animals their historical due."- Frank Van Nuys , author of Varmints and Victims: Predator Control in the American West, "In a way both subtle and important, Flores offers an answer to the recent flurry of interest in the Anthropocene, that unofficial recent period of geological and climate history influence by human activity. American Serengeti reveals the significance of placing human contributions and disruptions into a longer historical narrative."- Western Historical Quarterly "An excellent work of environmental history."- Chronicles of Oklahoma "Flores provides a sharpened focus with a richly detailed examination of six large species common in the 1840s. His writing is never dull and frequently bites with wit."- Mountain Town News "A passionate elegy to the American Great Plains and their former fauna. Historian Dan Flores draws deeply from his professional expertise and life as a denizen of this eco-region to create a poetic book that functions as both conservation manifesto and memoir. Writing for a general audience, the author masterfully renders an evocative portrait to elucidate all that has been lost--vast herds of free-ranging antelope and bison, with attendant predators such as wolves, coyotes, and grizzly bears."-- Choice "A fascinating and approachable book that is suitable for students, scholars and nonacademic audiences who enjoy reading about the intersections between natural history and the environmental history of the American West."- H-Net Reviews, "A big and haunting history stuffed with big animals and big ideas that reveals the fragility and resilience of the Great Plains ecosystem over the past 10,000 years." -- Karl Jacoby , author of Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation " American Serengeti is Dan Flores's love song to the Great Plains, with each verse a fond embrace of one of its own--grizzlies and bison, pronghorns and coyotes. Beautifully written, it strikes just the right note for those of us drawn to this magnificent part of America. For those yet to know it, this book is a loving invitation to come and see."-- Elliott West , author of The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado "A highly personal book reflecting the vast knowledge of a leading cultural and environmental historian."-- David Dary , author of The Buffalo Book and True Tales of the Prairies and Plains "Dan Flores has written an engaging and provocative account of ecological change in the Great Plains by tracing the interaction of the large animals and humans in this grassland during the past 13,000 years. This is a book worth reading by anyone interested in the history of the American West."-- R. Douglas Hurt , Head Fellow of the Agricultural History Society, Associate Fellow of the Center for Great Plains Studies "As sweeping and expansive as the Great Plains themselves, Dan Flores's American Serengeti is 'Big History' at its best. Personal, passionate, and scholarly, his essays on pronghorns, coyotes, horses, grizzly bears, bison, and wolves give these ancient, durable animals their historical due."-- Frank Van Nuys , author of Varmints and Victims: Predator Control in the American West, "A highly personal book reflecting the vast knowledge of a leading cultural and environmental historian."- David Dary , author of The Buffalo Book and True Tales of the Prairies and Plains
Dewey Decimal591.50978
Table Of ContentIntroduction: American Serengeti 1. Empires of the Sun: Big History and the Great Plains 2. Pronghorns: Survivors from a Lost World 3. Coyote: The American Jackal 4. Bringing Home All the Pretty Horses: The Horse Trade and the American Great Plains 5. The Most Dangerous Beast: The Grizzly, the Great Plains, the West 6. A Dream of Bison 7. Wolfsong Redux 8. Loving the Plains, Hating the Plains, Re-Wilding the Plains Bibliography Index
SynopsisThe story of what happened to six major species of the Great Plains--pronhorn antelope, gray wolves, bison, coyotes, wild horses, and grizzly bears--in the 19th and 20th centuries, and the prospects for recovering North America's "Serengeti" in our time by re-creating a great Plains wilderness on a Yellowstone-sized scale. The book is thus the story of plains slaughterhouse history in the 19th century and large-scale conservation hopes for the 21st., Winner of the Stubbendieck Great Plains Distinguished Book Prize America's Great Plains once possessed one of the grandest wildlife spectacles of the world, equaled only by such places as the Serengeti, the Masai Mara, or the veld of South Africa. Pronghorn antelope, gray wolves, bison, coyotes, wild horses, and grizzly bears: less than two hundred years ago these creatures existed in such abundance that John James Audubon was moved to write, "it is impossible to describe or even conceive the vast multitudes of these animals." In a work that is at once a lyrical evocation of that lost splendor and a detailed natural history of these charismatic species of the historic Great Plains, veteran naturalist and outdoorsman Dan Flores draws a vivid portrait of each of these animals in their glory--and tells the harrowing story of what happened to them at the hands of market hunters and ranchers and ultimately a federal killing program in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Great Plains with its wildlife intact dazzled Americans and Europeans alike, prompting numerous literary tributes. American Serengeti takes its place alongside these celebratory works, showing us the grazers and predators of the plains against the vast opalescent distances, the blue mountains shimmering on the horizon, the great rippling tracts of yellowed grasslands. Far from the empty "flyover country" of recent times, this landscape is alive with a complex ecology at least 20,000 years old--a continental patrimony whose wonders may not be entirely lost, as recent efforts hold out hope of partial restoration of these historic species. Written by an author who has done breakthrough work on the histories of several of these animals--including bison, wild horses, and coyotes-- American Serengeti is as rigorous in its research as it is intimate in its sense of wonder--the most deeply informed, closely observed view we have of the Great Plains' wild heritage.
LC Classification NumberQL155.F55 2016

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