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The Audubon Society field guide to North…
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The Audubon Society field guide to North American wildflowers, eastern region (edition 1979)

by William A. Niering, Nancy C. Olmstead (Joint Author.)

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1,5281111,775 (4.04)None
Text and 700 color photographs provide detailed identification information on more than 600 species of wildflowers, with notes on more than 400 others.
Member:timotheos
Title:The Audubon Society field guide to North American wildflowers, eastern region
Authors:William A. Niering
Other authors:Nancy C. Olmstead (Joint Author.)
Info:New York : Knopf : distributed by Random House, c1979.
Collections:Your library
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Tags:botany, field guides

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National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Wildflowers: Eastern Region by William A. Niering (Author)

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This guide covers the most common wildflowers and weeds of the Eastern Region of North America. Entries are grouped by color and shape to aid in identification, with over 700 full-color pictures. The caption under each photo provides common name, dimensions, and page reference. The page numbers take you to more detailed descriptions grouped by family and species. Helpfully, these entries are cross-referenced back to the page of each picture.

Under the detailed entry, you learn the family of the wildflower or weed, description, flowering period, habitat, range, and comments. In spite of having both a small picture and a small description, I still couldn’t differentiate among many of the entries, and was occasionally perplexed. For example, there is an entry for poison ivy, but not poison oak. There is an entry for poison sumac, but it does not appear in the index. Many of the flowers look too much like one another for a novice like me to be able to make a successful identification, and in spite of the large number of items included, there is always a chance the one you want will be missing.

Nevertheless, it is still better than no guide at all, and the size of the guide is convenient for carrying around in your backpack while out and about. ( )
  nbmars | Apr 12, 2021 |
These field guys can be wordy with difficult language, not something the everyday observer can easily understand but for some reason, children love looking at them. And they really can teach a lot. the pictures are beautiful as well. Very informational, and dare I say fun, reading material for little naturalists. ( )
  hannahmariebell | Mar 30, 2017 |
Very easy to use, but too heavy to conveniently take with you when hiking. I just leave it at home and take a picture of anything I have a question about and look it up from there.
  JG_IntrovertedReader | Apr 3, 2013 |
These were the field guides I learned from as a wee one. They have a front section of beautiful color photographs, arranged by color and shape, which cross-references to a textual section in the back, which is organized taxonomically. I have to confess that my affection for these is mostly nostalgic; I have rarely had luck using the plates to identify plants, because they often don't show growth habit or foliage very well, and sometimes don't even provide very good context for size. Sometimes two plants on the same page with very similar flowers will have been photographed in completely different ways, which makes it difficult to compare. They also lean toward the showier and larger plants, and leave out a lot of weedy, roadside/lawn species. They are very pretty, though, and the descriptive sections at the back are actually quite good. It's possible that I'm biased because all the common plants that can be identified out of here are ones I'd already learned by heart while I was stil pre-literate!
1 vote melannen | Apr 12, 2012 |
Like all the audobon guides, this is highly usable, portable enough to carry in the field, and contains good descriptions of the species. ( )
  Devil_llama | May 22, 2011 |
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Excellent field guide for children and adults. Easy to read and locate information. I have learned a lot from all Audubon field guides and have all of them on my phone as well as hard copies of each field guide.
added by AshleyWilliams1994 | editAudubon (Sep 1, 2016)
 

» Add other authors (4 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Niering, William A.Authorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Nehring, CarolAuthormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Olmstead, Nancy C.Authormain authorall editionsconfirmed
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Text and 700 color photographs provide detailed identification information on more than 600 species of wildflowers, with notes on more than 400 others.

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887 p. : ill. ; 20 cm.
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