Wild Fiordland
This is a paperback edition of this book, which was shortlisted for the Montana NZ Book Awards in 1997. It is a major work of regional natural history introducing a New Zealand World Heritage Area, Fiordland National Park.
In a world largely modified by humans, Fiordland is a breathing space for nature. It is one of the planet’s great wilderness areas, where monumental landscapes combine with a mosaic of miniature worlds. Located on the southwest coast of New Zealand, much of its landscape was formed of great valleys carved out by glaciers which are now half-drowned. Milford Sound is one of New Zealand’s most remote but necessary tourist destinations, while Dusky Sound provided a home to Captain Cook’s Resolution and its scientists, as well as artist William Hodges, for five weeks in 1773. This book is for travellers, nature-lovers and scientists alike.
Other books by the same authors in this prize-winning series are Wild Central, Wild Dunedin, and Wild Rivers.
‘It’s an accessible but authoritative book about geology and landscapes, flora and fauna of this relatively inaccessible region.’
– Otago Daily Times
About the author
Neville Peat
Neville Peat is an award-winning New Zealand nature writer and biographer. His books also cover genres such as history, geography and the environment. The original edition of Wild Dunedin won the inaugural Montana New Zealand Book Awards' Natural Heritage Category in 1996. In...
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Brian Patrick
Brian Patrick is the co-author of several books on natural history and invertebrates, including Wild Central and Wild Fiordland (with Neville Peat), Butterflies of the South Pacific (with Hamish Patrick) and Butterflies and Moths of New Zealand (with Brian Parkinson). He has worked for the Department of...
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Wild Rivers
Wild Central
Southern Land, Southern People
Queenstown
Kiwi
Detours
Seabird Genius
Wanaka
Stewart Island Rakiura National Park
Wild Dunedin