First Title value, for Searching:
Slither : how nature's most maligned creatures illuminate our world
First Author value, for Searching:
Hall, Stephen S. author 0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n86077560 1http://id.loc.gov/rwo/agents/n86077560.
Format:
Libros
Abstract:
"For millennia, depictions of snakes as alternatively beautiful and menacing creatures have appeared in religious texts, mythology, poetry, and beyond. From the foundational deities of ancient Egypt to the reactions of squeamish schoolchildren today, it is a historically commonplace belief that snakes are devious, dangerous, and even evil. But where there is hatred and fear, there is also fascination and reverence. How is it that creatures so despised and sinister, so foreign of movement and ostensibly devoid of sociality and emotion, have fired the imaginations of poets, prophets, and painters across time and cultures? In SLITHER, science writer Stephen S. Hall presents a naturalistic, cultural, ecological, and scientific meditation on these loathed yet magnetic creatures. In each chapter, he explores a biological aspect of The Snake, such as their cold blooded metabolism and venomous nature, alongside their mythology, artistic depictions, and cultural veneration. In doing so, he explores not only what neurologically triggers our wary fascination with these limbless creatures, but also how the current generation of snake scientists is using cutting-edge technologies to discover new truths about these evolutionarily ancient creatures--truths that may ultimately affect and enhance human health"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Introduction: "Snakes, Ardency of" Snake Road: Catskill, New York -- Female 21 and the Black Mamba (two snake tales) Snake Road: State Highway 254, El Dorado, Kansas -- Snake Guys (herpeto-sociology) Snake Road: Interstate 78, Hamburg, Pennsylvania -- A Pandemonium of Molecules (Venom) Snake Road: Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York -- Dreams of Healing (Metabolism) Snake Road: Isola Tiberina, Rome, Italy -- The Wasabi Connection (Sensation) Snake Road: Via Orto Magliocco, Cocullo, Italy -- The Evolution of Pleasure (Reproduction) Snake Road: Fifth Avenue, New York City -- No Legs? No Problem (Locomotion) Snake Road: "B Road," near Aiken, South Carolina -- The Python Queen of South Florida (Adaptation) Snake Road: Avenue of the Dead, Teotihuacan, Mexico -- Epilogue: Snake Lectures.
Tema:
| Snakes -- Behavior. |
| Reptiles -- Evolution. |
| Snakes -- United States -- Identification. |
| Herpetology -- Fieldwork -- Anecdotes. |
| Herpetologists -- Anecdotes. |
| Serpents -- États-Unis -- Identification. |
| Herpétologie -- Recherche sur le terrain -- Anecdotes. |
| Herpétologistes -- Anecdotes. |
Summary:
"For millennia, depictions of snakes as alternatively beautiful and menacing creatures have appeared in religious texts, mythology, poetry, and beyond. From the foundational deities of ancient Egypt to the reactions of squeamish schoolchildren today, it is a historically commonplace belief that snakes are devious, dangerous, and even evil. But where there is hatred and fear, there is also fascination and reverence. How is it that creatures so despised and sinister, so foreign of movement and ostensibly devoid of sociality and emotion, have fired the imaginations of poets, prophets, and painters across time and cultures? In SLITHER, science writer Stephen S. Hall presents a naturalistic, cultural, ecological, and scientific meditation on these loathed yet magnetic creatures. In each chapter, he explores a biological aspect of The Snake, such as their cold blooded metabolism and venomous nature, alongside their mythology, artistic depictions, and cultural veneration. In doing so, he explores not only what neurologically triggers our wary fascination with these limbless creatures, but also how the current generation of snake scientists is using cutting-edge technologies to discover new truths about these evolutionarily ancient creatures--truths that may ultimately affect and enhance human health"-- Provided by publisher.
Number Available:
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