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Cover image The Woodpecker Mystery

The Woodpecker Mystery: The inevitability of the improbable

Print publication date: 25/10/2023

Franschhoek Press, Miscellaneous non-GSL, Earth Structure Processes and Tectonics, GeoGifts, New

Type: Book (Paperback)

Weight: 0.8kg

Number of pages: 232

£15.00

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Full Description

Product Code: MPNWM

By Nick Norman

An exploration geologist by profession and keen birder by hobby, Nick Norman was surprised to see a woodpecker in Brazil, where he was working at the time, which was strikingly similar to those he knew in the land of his birth, South Africa. His assumption that it was explained by an ancestral woodpecker family having been fragmented when supercontinent Gondwana split into Africa and South America – and others - was contested by the leading ornithologist he consulted when next back in South Africa. In subsequent work engagements in South America, he saw other birds there, as well as trees, which represented families he knew well in Africa. That was the mystery: how the same families of flora and fauna had distributed themselves in continents astride a major world ocean, the South Atlantic.

Sherlock Holmes said: ‘When you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.’ In solving the mystery, the truth of Holmes’s axiom became more and more evident to Nick as he discovered extraordinary travelogues of trees and birds for which, given enough time, a wide ocean was no barrier. It is a story of astonishing epiphanies.


 

"This authoritative book of scientific discovery ... is an exciting read and a masterpiece in elucidating the role of plate tectonics, ocean currents, floating islands of debris, evolution and genetics to explain the distribution of species around the world."

Bruce Rubidge, University of the Witwatersrand

 

"This book tantalises the reader with fascinating details of natural history that links the Gondwana neighbours of Africa and South America. Those interested in nature will enjoy being challenged by Nick's latest book"

Eugene Moll, University of the Western Cape

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