enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Albert R. Brand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_R._Brand

    At Cornell University he became a graduate student of ornithologist Arthur Augustus Allen. Brand collaborated with Cornell's engineering department to record bird songs, publishing two books accompanied by photographs. [5] His first guide book about bird songs was accompanied by a phonograph record of a few dozen calls. He followed it up with a ...

  3. Macaulay Library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macaulay_Library

    They used motion-picture film with synchronized sound to record a song sparrow, a house wren, and a rose-breasted grosbeak. This was the Beginning of Cornell Library of Natural Sounds. Graduate student Albert R. Brand and Cornell undergraduate M. Peter Keane developed recording equipment for use in the open field. In the next two years they had ...

  4. Eastern phoebe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Phoebe

    The eastern phoebe's call is a sharp chip, and the song, from which it gets its name, is fee-bee. The eastern wood pewee (Contopus virens) is extremely similar in appearance. It lacks the buff hue usually present on the lighter parts of the eastern phoebe's plumage, and thus has always clearly defined and contrasting wing-bars.

  5. Bird vocalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_vocalization

    The use of spectrograms to visualize bird song was then adopted by Donald J. Borror [129] and developed further by others including W. H. Thorpe. [130] [131] These visual representations are also called sonograms or sonagrams. Beginning in 1983, some field guides for birds use sonograms to document the calls and songs of birds. [132]

  6. Far Above Cayuga's Waters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Far_Above_Cayuga's_Waters

    View of Cayuga Lake from Cornell University "Far Above Cayuga's Waters" is Cornell University's alma mater.The lyrics were written circa 1870 by roommates Archibald Croswell Weeks (Class of 1872), and Wilmot Moses Smith (Class of 1874), and set to the tune of "Annie Lisle", a popular 1857 ballad by H. S. Thompson about a heroine dying of tuberculosis.

  7. Arthur A. Allen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_A._Allen

    Arthur Augustus Allen (28 December 1885 – 17 January 1964) was an American professor of ornithology at Cornell University. Smithsonian has credited him for the transition of ornithology from being focused on killing and collecting birds, to being focused on observing and protecting them.

  8. Animal song - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_song

    Listen to Nature Archived 2016-09-22 at the Wayback Machine 400 examples of animal songs and calls; Washington U. Mice Songs; Cornell Animal Sound Library (over 300,000 audio recordings from various species of mammals, birds, amphibians, fish, arthropods and reptiles). The British Library Sound Archive has more than 150,000 recordings of 10,000 ...

  9. Steller's jay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steller's_jay

    Its alarm call is a harsh, nasal "wah". Some calls are sex-specific: females produce a rattling sound, while males make a high-pitched "gleep gleep". Steller's jay is also a noted mimic: it can imitate the vocalizations of many species of birds, other animals, and sounds of non-animal origin.