|aMeadowlands : |ba wetlands survival story / |cThomas F. Yezerski
250
|a1st ed.
260
|aNew York : |bFarrar, Straus, Giroux, |c2011
300
|a1 v. (unpaged) : |bcol. ill. ; |c24 x 27 cm.
500
|aIncludes bibliographical references
500
|aThe history of the Meadowlands, from its pristine state, to its gradual transformation by European settlers, to the pollution caused by industrialization, and the changes brought by environmental organizations striving to protect it
650
0
|aNature conservation--New Jersey--Hackensack Meadowlands--Juvenile literature
A New York Times Notable Children's Book for 2011 One of Horn Book Best Nonfiction Books of 2011 The 20,000 acres of wetlands in New Jersey now known as the Meadowlands were once home to hundreds of species of plants and animals. But in the four hundred years since European explorers first arrived in the Meadowlands, people have dammed up, drained, built over, and polluted this formerly vibrant ecosystemnd all but destroyed it. Still, signs of life remainnder bridges, on the edges of parking lots, and beside train tracks. Slowly but surely, with help from activist groups, government organizations, and ordinary people, the resilient creatures of the Meadowlands are making a comeback, and the wetlands are recovering.
A New York Times Notable Children's Book for 2011 One of Horn Book Best Nonfiction Books of 2011 The 20,000 acres of wetlands in New Jersey now known as the Meadowlands were once home to hundreds of species of plants and animals. But in the four hundred years since European explorers first arrived in the Meadowlands, people have dammed up, drained, built over, and polluted this formerly vibrant ecosystemnd all but destroyed it. Still, signs of life remainnder bridges, on the edges of parking lots, and beside train tracks. Slowly but surely, with help from activist groups, government organizations, and ordinary people, the resilient creatures of the Meadowlands are making a comeback, and the wetlands are recovering.