Mountains and Marshes: Exploring the Bay Area's Natural History

Mountains and Marshes: Exploring the Bay Area's Natural History

by David Rains Wallace
Mountains and Marshes: Exploring the Bay Area's Natural History

Mountains and Marshes: Exploring the Bay Area's Natural History

by David Rains Wallace

Paperback

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Overview

Described as "a writer in the tradition of Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, and other self–educated seers" by the San Francisco Chronicle, David Rains Wallace turns his attention to one of the most distinctive corners of California: the San Francisco Bay Area. Weaving a complex and engaging story of the Bay Area from personal, historical, and environmental threads, Wallace's exploration of the natural world takes readers on a fascinating tour through the region: from Point Reyes National Park, where an abandoned campfire and an invasion of Douglas fir trees combusted into a dangerous wildfire, to Oakland's Lake Merritt, a surprising site amid skyscrapers for some of the best local bird–watching; from the majestic Diablo Range near San Jose, where conservationists fight against land developers to preserve species like mountain lions and golden eagles, to the Golden Gate itself, the iconic bridge that—geologically speaking—leads not to gold but to serpentine. Each essay explores a different place throughout the four corners of the Bay Area, uncovering the flora and fauna that make each so extraordinary.



With a naturalist's eye, a penchant for local history, and an obvious passion for the subject, Wallace's new collection is among the first nature writing dedicated entirely to the Bay Area. Informative, engrossing, and exquisitely described, Mountains and Marshes affords unexpected yet familiar views of a beloved region that, even amidst centuries of growth and change, is as dynamic as it is timeless.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781619025967
Publisher: Catapult
Publication date: 12/15/2015
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 680,585
Product dimensions: 6.07(w) x 8.99(h) x 0.47(d)

About the Author

David Rains Wallace is an author of more than sixteen books on conservation and natural history, including The Monkey's Bridge (a 1997 New York Times Notable Book) and The Klamath Knot (1984 Burroughs Medal). He has written articles for the National Geographic Society, The Nature Conservancy, the Sierra Club, and other groups. Wallace's work also has appeared in Harper's Magazine and The New York Times. Wallace lives in Berkeley, CA.

Table of Contents

Introduction-the serpentine gate 1

The Bay West 9

Harbor seals 11

Pelicans and pantyhose 15

The living, dying bay 19

The crowded desert islands 31

A stop on the fly way 37

The North Bay 47

The raven roost 49

The mount vision fire 55

The ghost of crystal lakes 61

Yellowstone west 67

The East Bay 73

Grasslands 75

Life in the cemetery 81

The peak of unexpectedness 85

Beavers and boutiques 103

The South Bay 111

Sunol falcon watch 113

Puddles 121

A walk on the ridge lands 125

The mountains of running away 129

Cultures and Creatures 141

Starlings 143

The fifth season 149

Gardening 153

Leapers and creepers 161

Megafauna by the bay 169

First impressions 183

Oaklands 191

Dance of the webspinners 197

Salamander land 203

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