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Maud Doria Haviland

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Name
  
Maud Haviland

Role
  
Author

Died
  
1941


Maud Doria Haviland Wild Life On The Wing 1913 Maud Doria Haviland Wilson Patten

Books
  
A summer on the Yenesei, Forest, steppe, & tundra

Maud Doria Haviland (10 February 1889 – 3 April 1941) was an English ornithologist. She was born in Tamworth, Warwickshire, married Harold Hulme Brindley, a fellow of St John's College, Cambridge, and died in Cambridge. Her great-grandfather, John Haviland, was a Professor of Anatomy and the first Regius Professor of Physic at the University of Cambridge to give regular courses in pathology and medicine.

Haviland is the author of A Summer on the Yenesei, where she narrates the experiences of an expedition on a trip down the Yenisei River in Siberia to the Kara Sea in 1914. The book was inspired the route traversed by Henry Seebohm (1832–1895) in 1877 as described in his Siberia in Asia, and by H.L. Popham (1864–1943) in Notes of birds observed on the Yenesei River, Siberia, in 1895.

During this journey, on which she was accompanied by Polish anthropologist Maria Antonina Czaplicka (1886–1921), painter Dora Curtis and Henry Usher Hall of the Philadelphia University Museum (1876–1944), she wrote her impressions about nature and the birds,.

The more complete existing bibliographical references were published by T.S. Palmer (Treasurer of the American Ornithologists' Union) in 1943. She was an active member of this association from 1920.

References

Maud Doria Haviland Wikipedia