George Miksch Sutton

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George M. Sutton in 1972

George Miksch Sutton (May 16, 1898,

Arthur Augustus Allen during an expedition to the Singer Tract in Louisiana to make sketches of ivory-billed woodpecker.[2] He did extensive field work in the Arctic (including Iceland), Oklahoma, Labrador, and Mexico. He received his doctorate from Cornell University and held academic posts at the University of Michigan and the University of Oklahoma, Norman.[3] The George M. Sutton Avian Research Center in Bartlesville, Oklahoma was named after him.[4]

Bibliography

His book-length works include:

  • Mexican Birds: First Impressions (1951)
  • Iceland Summer (1961)
  • Oklahoma Birds (1967)
  • High Arctic (1971)
  • At a Bend in a Mexican River (1972)
  • Portraits of Mexican Birds (1975)
  • Fifty Common Birds of Oklahoma (1977)
  • To a Young Bird Artist (1979)

Books illustrated by Sutton include:

He also drew the burrowing owl that is now used as the logo for the Nebraska Ornithologists' Union.[5]

References

  1. .
  2. ^ https://training.fws.gov/history/images/IvoryBillPamphlet1.jpg [bare URL image file]
  3. ISSN 0004-8038
    .
  4. ^ "The Life of George Miksch Sutton". www.suttoncenter.org. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  5. ^ Nebraska Ornithologists' Union. "About the NOU". noubirds.org. Retrieved 18 December 2023.

External links