Bees: Their Vision, Chemical Senses, and Language Karl von Frisch
Bees: Their Vision, Chemical Senses, and Language Karl von Frisch front cover used secondhand nonfiction book
Bees: Their Vision, Chemical Senses, and Language back cover used nonfiction second hand book

Images are scans of the actual book you will receive, so you know exactly what you are purchasing. Click or tap to zoom in.

Bees: Their Vision, Chemical Senses, and Language

Author: Karl von Frisch
$5.00 500
Out of Stock
Book Title
Bees: Their Vision, Chemical Senses, and Language
Author
Karl von Frisch
Book Condition
GOOD - dustjacket has tears & wear. Old bookstore stamp on front free endpaper.
Book Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Year Published
1964
Through 40 years of brilliant, patient, scientific detective work, world-renowned biologist Karl von Frisch learned how the world looks, smells and tastes to a bee: more remarkable still, he demonstrated that bees can and do communicate to one another information of considerable complexity. This lucid report of his findings, which were at first considered almost unbelievable in their implications, has become a classic in biological study, opening up a wider vision and clearer comprehension of our vast and complicated universe.

Through 40 years of brilliant, patient, scientific detective work, world-renowned biologist Karl von Frisch learned how the world looks, smells and tastes to a bee: more remarkable still, he demonstrated that bees can and do communicate to one another information of considerable complexity. This lucid report of his findings, which were at first considered almost unbelievable in their implications, has become a classic in biological study, opening up a wider vision and clearer comprehension of our vast and complicated universe.

Through 40 years of brilliant, patient, scientific detective work, world-renowned biologist Karl von Frisch learned how the world looks, smells and tastes to a bee: more remarkable still, he demonstrated that bees can and do communicate to one another information of considerable complexity. This lucid report of his findings, which were at first considered almost unbelievable in their implications, has become a classic in biological study, opening up a wider vision and clearer comprehension of our vast and complicated universe.