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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher |
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Original language | |
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BECOMING A MARINE BIOLOGIST
Choosing a profession begins with imagining yourself in a career. Now New York Times bestselling author Virginia Morell dives into the adventures of a marine biologist team, allowing a much needed, in-depth look into the field.
What's it like to be a marine biologist? And how does one build a career in this field that has great environmental impact?
For the last two decades, Robin Baird has been the leading expert on twenty-five species of the whales and dolphins of Hawaii. He and his team have discovered that many of the species have resident populations (they are not simply passing through the islands) and these residents are affected by human activities. For most young people, Baird's trajectory may seem an impossible dream. Indeed, many of the researchers Virginia Morell met and interviewed didn't set out to become marine biologists or to study marine mammals. Most of them had a lifelong passion for the natural world, and by volunteering found themselves drawn to working with marine life or some other aspect of the sea. Morell tells their stories, and many others, here.
Becoming a Marine Biologist explores how successful marine biologists curated their careers, and what they suggest to young people today who feel called to protect our oceans by studying the sea and its inhabitants.
Virginia Morell is a regular contributor to National Geographic Magazine and is also a contributing correspondent to Science. She's written for Smithsonian, Discover, The New York Times Magazine, International Wildlife, Audubon, Slate, Outside, and other publications. She and her husband, fellow writer Michael McRae, live in Ashland, Oregon on the edge of the Siskiyou Mountains, where they hike every day with their farm collie, Buckaroo.
For the last two decades, Robin Baird has been the leading expert on twenty-five species of the whales and dolphins of Hawaii. He and his team have discovered that many of the species have resident populations (they are not simply passing through the islands) and these residents are affected by human activities. For most young people, Baird's trajectory may seem an impossible dream. Indeed, many of the researchers Virginia Morell met and interviewed didn't set out to become marine biologists or to study marine mammals. Most of them had a lifelong passion for the natural world, and by volunteering found themselves drawn to working with marine life or some other aspect of the sea. Morell tells their stories, and many others, here.
Becoming a Marine Biologist explores how successful marine biologists curated their careers, and what they suggest to young people today who feel called to protect our oceans by studying the sea and its inhabitants.
Virginia Morell is a regular contributor to National Geographic Magazine and is also a contributing correspondent to Science. She's written for Smithsonian, Discover, The New York Times Magazine, International Wildlife, Audubon, Slate, Outside, and other publications. She and her husband, fellow writer Michael McRae, live in Ashland, Oregon on the edge of the Siskiyou Mountains, where they hike every day with their farm collie, Buckaroo.
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Book
Published 2019-04-02 by Simon & Schuster |
Book
Published 2019-04-02 by Simon & Schuster |