fieldofreeds.com
papyrus, wetlands, swamps, | The Plant That Changed The World
http://fieldofreeds.com/book-news
Papyrus and the Evolution of Civilization from Ancient Egypt to Today’s Water Wars. See “ News. 8221; for complete listing of signings, talks, reviews and appearances). The Athenaeum, Alexandria,VA (N.Vir.FineArtsAs.) Nov17. Green Spring Park Center, Farfax, VA January 18. The Writer’s Center, Bethesda MD (book reading) May 17, 2015. Lunch Book Talk, Vienna Presb. Church, June 10, 2015. Lunch Book Talk, North. Virginia Women’s Social Club, Sept 2, 2015.
fieldofreeds.com
Author | The Plant That Changed The World
http://fieldofreeds.com/about-the-author
Papyrus and the Evolution of Civilization from Ancient Egypt to Today’s Water Wars. Known on MySpace as Bwana Papyrus. On Twitter he came by his name honestly in Africa while working in the swamps along the Nile River. He is a trained ecologist with a Ph.D. from University of California at Berkeley and is the author of many scientific papers on the ecology and development of papyrus swamps. The Plant That Changed The World. Published by Pegasus is now on sale.
fieldofreeds.com
Gallery | The Plant That Changed The World
http://fieldofreeds.com/gallery
Papyrus and the Evolution of Civilization from Ancient Egypt to Today’s Water Wars. Making Paper with Papyrus:.
fieldofreeds.com
Save the Sudd | The Plant That Changed The World
http://fieldofreeds.com/save-the-sudd-swamp
Papyrus and the Evolution of Civilization from Ancient Egypt to Today’s Water Wars. Papyrus is a dominant plant in the Sudd in Southern Sudan, the largest protected freshwater swamp in the world. This swamp is now a pawn in a dramatic world-changing face-off between Africa and Egypt, a showdown that hopefully will end in a peacefully cooperative effort. The Plant that Changed the World: Papyrus and the Evolution of Civilization: From Ancient Egypt to Today’s Water Wars.
fieldofreeds.com
Papyrus Conservation | The Plant That Changed The World
http://fieldofreeds.com/papyrus-conservation
Papyrus and the Evolution of Civilization from Ancient Egypt to Today’s Water Wars. Disastrous weather in the 6th Century caused famines and plagues that almost wiped out civilization in the west, but it was papyrus paper in scrolls and codices that kept the record of our early days and allowed the thread of history to remain unbroken. The sworn enemy of oblivion and the guardian of our immortality, it came to our rescue then and will again. 1 Papyrus Swamps as a Habitat for Birds.