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Alligators, Prehistoric Presence in the American Landscape (Creating the North American Landscape)
 
 
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Alligators, Prehistoric Presence in the American Landscape (Creating the North American Landscape) [Hardcover]

Professor Martha A. Strawn (Author)
1.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Creating the North American Landscape April 21, 1997

"I ran as fast as I could toward the banana trees with the gator right behind me, gaining on me with every step. Her jaws popping together sounded like a door slamming. I reached the first banana tree just ahead of the gator and climbed right up it like it had stairs... I had climbed up about ten or twelve feet and I was slipping back down, so I made a desperate effort and managed to get my hands into the base of the leaves. Just as I thought I might be safe, the tree started falling over." -- LeRoy Overstreet, "Memories of Gator Hunts," from Alligators, Prehistoric Presence in the American Landscape

During the past nine years, photographer Martha Strawn has taken more than 40,000 photographs of the alligator--in freshwater marshes and swamps, lakes and ponds, rivers, bayous, brackish estuaries, and saltwater coastal marshes and backwaters, from Texas to North Carolina. Alligators, Prehistoric Presence in the American Landscape offers a selection of 151 of Strawn's photographs in a unique book that combines art, science, history, folklore, land ethics, and literature to tell the story of America's southern landscape and one of its most evocative creatures.

For at least 65 million years, the alligator has inhabited the North American continent. One of the few direct links to the age of the dinosaur, these ancient reptiles move gracefully through water but are relatively awkward on land (though they can charge aggressively if threatened). Strawn photographs these remarkable creatures along the white sands of the Florida landscape and the highways of Louisiana Cajun country, in citrus and avocado groves, and in developments throughout the suburban South. Here are the wetlands and deepwaters where alligators feed, bask in the sun, perform courtship dances, mate, nest, watch over their young--and, increasingly, encounter the human inhabitants of their ancient landscape.

Strawn covers such topics as mating and reproduction, hunting, loss of habitat, resource management, and the commercial meat and skin industries. Three personal essays bring home the relationship between alligators and humans: "Memories of Gator Hunts," by alligator hunter LeRoy Overstreet; "Living by the Wetlands," by Jane Gibson, a conservation anthropologist; and "Living with Alligators," by ecologist J. Whitfield Gibbons. These stories give voice to the people -- hunters, alligator farmers, meat and skin processors, scientists, and wildlife managers -- who spend their days and nights with this noble member of the order Crocodilia.

"When human beings and alligators live together in one habitat, each benefiting from the association, they are living in a state of mutuality. The benefits may be both physiological and behavioral. Establishing conditions that promote such relationships between two species can be of great value."--from Alligators, A Prehistoric Presence in the American Landscape


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

This richly illustrated photographic essay celebrates an ancient creature that is generally reviled, and it charts many possibilities for the future of alligators in the United States. Alligators are flourishing in many places, but in critical habitats such as the Everglades their numbers are declining dramatically as nesting grounds and watercourses are altered by development; in an accompanying essay, naturalist J. Whitfield Gibbons suggests that this pattern can be reversed so that alligators can once again be "one of the most picturesque features of our lakes, rivers, and bayous." This book is a real treat for 'gator lovers.

From Library Journal

Living in the wild in several Southern coastal states, with its largest populations in Florida and Louisiana, the alligator seems to hold a grip on the American psyche far stronger than its numbers and geographic range would suggest. The centerpiece of photographer and art professor Strawn's tribute to this fascinating wetlands reptile consists of 160 color photos. These are interwoven with the author's text, along with three essays contributed by an anthropologist, an ecologist, and an alligator hunter. By no means an exhaustive study, Strawn's very readable and attractive book touches on history, ecology, management, economics, folklore, and, most of all, the evolving alligator-human relationship. Highly recommended for public and academic libraries. Libraries collecting in this area should also consider Vaughn L. Glasgow's A Social History of the American Alligator (LJ 9/1/91).?William H. Wiese, Iowa State Univ. Lib., Ames
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press (April 21, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801852897
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801852893
  • Product Dimensions: 10.7 x 8.7 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 1.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,596,394 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Very poorly put together and disgusting book., February 26, 2005
By 
Brad Hutchinson (Katy, TX United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Alligators, Prehistoric Presence in the American Landscape (Creating the North American Landscape) (Hardcover)
I saw this at a used bookstore for about $2 and figured I couldn't go wrong being a large hardcover and me a reptile lover, but it's not even worth that much. The book is basically three essays written by three different people that have pictures placed throughout that have nothing to do with the essay. There are also fact pages on various subjects throughout the book that are not at all relevant to what is going on in the essays and don't really make any sense with the overall feel.

I won't even bother with reviewing the first two essays and just put one word to describe them--GARBAGE and move on. The third essay is titled "Living with Alligators" and is the absolute highlight of this book. If this essay were in a book alone this would be a 5 star rating, but due to details described further in this review it was only enough to bump the overall rating to a 2 for me. This essay is about how stupid people move next door to a swamp and then get mad when alligators come out of the swamp and people immediately want them killed, even though they are the ones in the wrong. It also tells of how people must test their manhood by killing alligators for no apparent purpose. This essay is something that should be read by any reptile lover or conservationist, but I would recommend skipping the rest of the book, if you must buy it. It's only about 10 pages long so just read it in the bookstore if you have time.

In the beginning of the book it states that the author has taken over 40,000 pictures of alligators but in my opinion the pictures in this book are pretty poor. They aren't of good quality and many have problems that should have edited out, if she really has taken that many..different ones should have been chosen to say the least.

Lastly, I completely agree with the other reviewer that this book is absolutely disgusting. Out of all the pictures in the book that are of alligators, over 50% of them are dead. Heres a description of some of the pictures---there are alligators being cut open, ones with blood everywhere, ones shot in the head, some hanging on a rope dead, some in bloody buckets full of them, some being gutted, some missing their hides, random pieces of alligators such as a big box of eyeballs, etc. etc. If my description sounds bad just imagine looking at the pictures, it's like the aftermath of a war.

To put that "This book is a real treat for 'gator lovers." is one of the biggest jokes i've ever seen, that should be changed to gator hunters! With the exception of J. Whitfield Gibbons essay "Living with Alligators" this book is a complete waste of paper, and disgusting.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Some of this book sickened me, July 20, 2004
By 
C. Boone (Carrabelle, FL USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Alligators, Prehistoric Presence in the American Landscape (Creating the North American Landscape) (Hardcover)
If you really like alligators, this is not the book for you. Portions of the book concern hunting alligators and processing them for meat. The accompanying photos for these sections sickened me.If I had any idea the book would include page after page of slaughtered alligators, I would never have bought it.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Alligators are adapted primarily to aquatic habitats of the American South. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Shellcracker Haven, United States, Lake Okeechobee, Gator Hunts, Jane Gibson, North Carolina, South Carolina, Whitfield Gibbons, Lake Rosalie, Miss Lydia, North America, Charlie Knight, Orange Creek Basin, Reedy Creek Swamp, American South, Doll Baby, Fort Tombecbe, Gotor Hunts, Shellcracker Lake, The Alligator's Life History, Aldo Leopold, Archie Carr, Avery Island, Brown's Boat Landing, Marks Refuge
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