Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Tragic Tale of the Great Auk
The Tragic Tale of the Great Auk | Jan Thornhill
7 posts | 5 read | 1 to read
For hundreds of thousands of years Great Auks thrived in the icy seas of the North Atlantic, bobbing on the waves, diving for fish and struggling up onto rocky shores to mate and hatch their fluffy chicks. But by 1844, not a single one of these magnificent birds was alive. In this stunningly illustrated non-fiction picture book, award-winning author and illustrator Jan Thornhill tells the tragic story of these birds that "weighed as much as a sack of potatoes and stood as tall as a preteens waist. Their demise came about in part because of their anatomy. They could swim swiftly underwater, but their small wings meant they couldnt fly and their feet were so far back on their bodies, they couldnt walk very well. Still the birds managed to escape their predators much of the time ... until humans became seafarers. Great Auks were pursued first by Vikings, then by Inuit, Beothuk and finally European hunters. Their numbers rapidly dwindled. They became collectors items -- their skins were stuffed for museums, to be displayed along with their beautiful eggs. (There are some amazing stories about these stuffed auks -- one was stolen from a German museum during WWII by Russian soldiers; another was flown to Iceland and given a red-carpet welcome at the airport.) Although undeniably tragic, the final demise of the Great Auk led to the birth of the conservation movement. Laws were eventually passed to prevent the killing of birds during the nesting season, and similar laws were later extended to other wildlife species.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
quote
ConnorLaCroix

Others called it Pingwen, or white-front, a name that became "penguin"

blurb
ConnorLaCroix

Pretty crazy that ancient humans ate these, and then later humans contributed to their extinction.

review
ConnorLaCroix
Pickpick

The book gives a lot of information about the Great Auk without making it too complicated for kids. The pictures are very helpful be ause they inform the words and help kids better understand what the words mean.

blurb
Lindy
post image

I‘m excited every year to see this list. Congratulations to Jan Thornhill for her big win! I will include links in the comments to hers and other winning titles that I‘ve reviewed on Litsy, and you can see the whole list here: http://bookcentre.ca/2017-ccbc-awards-winners/

36 likes4 comments
review
Lindy
post image
Pickpick

A tragic tale of greed, which I thought I already knew because of Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction. But I learned that Stone Age humans hunted auks, that Inuit used their windpipes on bladder darts, & that Beothuk dried their egg yolks for winter meals. At the end, Thornhill shows the bright side: the conservation movement born out of citizens concerned by vanishing species, & other birds now occupying space formerly used by auks. #picturebook 🇨🇦

37 likes1 comment
blurb
Lindy
post image

Flightless great auks nested in places that most predictors could not reach... but humans are resourceful.

30 likes1 stack add
blurb
Lindy
post image

The artwork in this nonfiction picture book is outstanding.

JazzFeathers 😍😍😍 7y
34 likes1 stack add1 comment