About This Book
An illustrated historical and scientific account traces human perceptions and knowledge of dolphins from ancient writers to modern observers, emphasizing how classical understanding was partly lost and later revived. It presents anatomical and taxonomic information, situating dolphins within Cetacea and describing major genera, freshwater species, size ranges, brain weights, diet variations, and reproductive features. Behavioral material highlights playfulness, apparent intelligence, and differing responses to captivity. Cultural and literary evidence from antiquity is integrated with contemporary natural-history observation to show how myth, classification, and empirical study together shaped changing views of these marine mammals.
About the Author
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