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1 September 2013 Field Notes Of Herbert Brown: Part 2. Arizona'S Pioneer Ornithologist
Thomas R. Huels, David E. Brown, R. Roy Johnson
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Abstract

Herbert Brown came to Arizona in 1873 from the eastern U. S. at age 25 to seek his fortune. He would remain here until his death in 1913. During this period, southern Arizona was widely known for its newly discovered, exceptional bird life, many species occurring nowhere else in the U.S. This attracted leading ornithologists, such as Charles Bendire and Elliott Coues, who came to Tucson, the lower Colorado River Valley, and elsewhere in southern Arizona to conduct their studies. By the 1880s Brown was corresponding with these visiting ornithologists and collecting birds, nests, and eggs, advancing the science of ornithology in this new territory. These out-of-state ornithologists conducted their studies, taking their records and specimens back to their own institutions. By contrast, Brown's unequaled collections were deposited at the University of Arizona where he was the first Curator of Ornithology. Part 2 of his following field notes document, in Brown's own words, the previously untold story of a life-long passion for ornithology by Arizona's first resident ornithologist.

Thomas R. Huels, David E. Brown, and R. Roy Johnson "Field Notes Of Herbert Brown: Part 2. Arizona'S Pioneer Ornithologist," Journal of the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science 45(1), 1-36, (1 September 2013). https://doi.org/10.2181/036.045.0102
Published: 1 September 2013
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