Supernavigators : Exploring the Wonders of How Animals Find Their Way
Supernavigators : Exploring the Wonders of How Animals Find Their Way
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Author(s): Barrie, David
ISBN No.: 9781615196692
Pages: 320
Year: 202006
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 23.39
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

A 2019 Nautilus Gold Award Winner, Animals Nature A Sunday Times Best Nature Book of the Year "We meet some animals that use sense of smell, others that navigate based on polarized light, others on magnetism. It seems that there are as many ways to find your way as there are species [Barrie writes] about." --Ari Shapiro, All Things Considered "[Barrie] is passionate about navigation and describes in delightful detail the myriad ways in which animals get around. The number of animals traveling long distance, from insects to sea turtles, and from eels to whales, is just astonishing, as are the many ways in which they find their way. Whenever our smartphone lacks satellite service, we still need to tap into our natural navigational capacities even if they are no match for those of the supernavigators in this eye-opening book."-- Frans de Waal, The New York Times Book Review "A must-read for anyone fascinated with the wonders of nature." --Publishers Weekly, starred review "Well written and accessible, this book will lead readers to conclude that animals are amazing, as is researchers'' ingenuity." --Choice "Barrie''s passion makes him an engaging guide, flitting from fact to anecdote like a butterfly hunting for nectar.


"-- New Scientist "In this exhilarating popular study, David Barrie reveals the roots of navigational prowess." --Nature "David Barrie is an engaging explorer, enthusiastically celebrating the skill of creatures as fascinating as they are enterprising." --Sunday Express "Many . exceptional navigators . are humble and unsung, and learning about them is one of the pleasures of Supernavigators ." -- The New Yorker "Barrie tells astounding tales of how various animals navigate the world and the equally intriguing stories of the scientists who study them."-- Science "Very enjoyable. Barrie is a charming guide as he leads us through the science to the wonder.


"-- Tristan Gooley, author of The Natural Navigator " Supernavigators is filled with marvels. Understanding the wonders of animal navigation may help us appreciate the small and large miracles that surround us." --Foreword Reviews, starred review "[Barrie''s] book about remarkable feats of migration by animals explores the front lines of research into how they do it." -- The Scientist "Readers interested in natural history or biology will find this stimulating." -- Library Journal "Only a sailor could relate the navigational powers of both humans and animals with such appreciation, excitement, and precision. Thank you, David Barrie, for taking us along on these riveting voyages by sail and wing, hoof and flipper. We arrive surprised, delighted, and awed."-- Sy Montgomery , author of How to Be a Good Creature "Animal migration is all around us, as visible and as invisible as magnetism and gravity and as scientific, magical, and wondrous.


David Barrie has done a superb job of elevating the invisible and shining light onto what most of us only glimpse from time to time. Like all migrations, this book itself is a homecoming of sorts." --Carl Safina, author of Beyond Words and What Animals Think and Feel "Immensely entertaining . What is engrossing about Barrie''s book is not just the remarkable behavior of the individual animals--the blind Mexican cave fish that uses the pressure waves from its own motion to detect different objects; the spiny lobsters that form long, straight conga lines of up to 200 meters as they trudge nose-to-tail into the deep--but the often painstaking detective work undertaken by the scientists . all you can do is gasp in amazement." --The Sunday Times "A wonderfully refreshing read." --Navigation News magazine "A compelling investigation of navigation in the animal kingdom. Dung beetles steer by the stars.


Dragonflies hitch a lift on monsoon winds. And it seems that ants might measure how far they''ve travelled by counting their steps. Who knew?" --Mail on Sunday Top 100 Summer Reads.


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