WSU Press has just released the first paperback edition of David Douglas: A Naturalist at Work. This highly illustrated collection of essays describes David Douglas’s time in the Pacific Northwest through period artwork, tribal interactions, archival treasures, herbarium specimens, and tracking the trails and waterways that Douglas traveled. For more information, click here. Jack will be making presentations about: David Douglas’s journeys across the Columbia Plateau at The Sandhill Crane Festival in Othello, Washington, on March 23 at 2:30 p.m. Mammoth bone finds around the margins of Ice Age Floods at the Ice Age Flood Institute’s annual Jubilee in Spokane on June 7....
Read MoreA new edition of Sources of the River has just been release by Talon Audio Books. It is now available on Audible, Libby, or wherever you get your recorded books. Audible...
Read MoreJack’s latest article in the Pacific Northwest Inlander discusses the last documented sighting of wild condors in Washington State. Is it possible for them to ever return? What is the current status of the birds, and what future plans exist for them? The article appears in two parts, both of which are available via the links below. The last scientifically documented sighting of a wild condor in Washington state occurred in 1897. Can they come back? The status of condors right now and future plans for the big...
Read MoreTantor Audio Books is going to produce an audio book of Sources of the River, so that David Thompson fans everywhere will have something to listen to as they drive around the Columbia Country. Stay tuned for more information.
Read MoreOn March 25 at 1:45 p.m., Jack will return to the Sandhill Crane Festival in Othello. His slide presentation on Condors in the Northwest will draw on the condor essay in his book Visible Bones as well as more recent research that is part of his current writing project. Register to attend this event at Othello Sandhill Crane Festival’s website.
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