A Naturalist in Alaska

A Naturalist in Alaska

by Adolph Murie
A Naturalist in Alaska

A Naturalist in Alaska

by Adolph Murie

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Overview

The larger mammals of North America are known mostly to a few big game hunters, while the ordinary public observes them only in captivity or tamed. Very few students of ecology have ever lived with these animals in their native habitat—even fewer have written about them from an ecological viewpoint. In this respect, Adolph Murie is almost unique.

This book concerns the domestic ways of the wildlife in Alaska, the grizzly bear, the wolf, the lynx, the wolverine, the Dall sheep, the caribou, and the Arctic fox. But even more fascinating than the life cycles of these creatures are their interrelationships—prey and predator maintaining a delicate balance in one of the few remaining wildernesses of this continent.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781789125238
Publisher: Muriwai Books
Publication date: 12/01/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Adolph Murie (1899-1974) was a naturalist, author, and wildlife biologist who pioneered field research on wolves, bears, and other mammals and birds in Arctic and sub-Arctic Alaska. He was also instrumental in protecting wolves from eradication and in preserving the biological integrity of the Denali National Park and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

He was born on September 6, 1899 in Moorhead, Minnesota to Ed and Marie Winstrom. In 1922, prior to completing college, Adolph Murie joined his brother, Olaus Murie, on an expedition to Mt. McKinley National Park, the first of many trips he would make to Alaska to do biological research. Murie received a bachelor’s degree from Concordia College, and attended graduate school at the University of Michigan, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1929. He subsequently worked on projects for the university’s Zoology Museum, among other things doing research on mammals in Guatemala and British Honduras.

In 1934, he went to work for the Wildlife Division of the National Park Service on a number of assignments, which resulted in studies of coyotes, elk, and bears in Wyoming, elk in the Olympics in Washington, coyotes in Arizona and the Yellowstone, and earned him the National Park Service Distinguished Service Award.

In 1947, he became Field Research Biologist for the National Park Service, spending a large part of his time in the Mt. McKinley National Park region of Alaska. His Wolves of Mt. McKinley is a famous study of the wolf as a predator on the white mountain sheep in Mt. McKinley National Park.

He died on August 16, 1974, at the STS Ranch, now part of the Murie Ranch Historic District in Moose, Wyoming.

In 1976 the Stanford University Law School established the “Olaus and Adolph Murie Award” for the best work done by a student in Environmental Law. The Murie Science and Learning Center in Denali National Park was opened and officially dedicated to Adolph Murie in 2004.
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