Book Reveals Secrets Of Nature’s Premier Architects: Birds
A new book from Princeton University Press explores how birds build their egg containers -- without the help of blueprints or CAD drawings.
We humans are builders and engineers. In that respect, we have something in common with our flying vertebrate friends -- yup, birds -- which often construct intricate nests with whatever materials might be at hand. A new book, Avian Architecture (Princeton University Press), by Peter Goodfellow, details (and clearly illustrates) various nest-building using "blueprint" drawings and thorough descriptions of the construction processes and engineering techniques of key species.

This isn't a lavish coffee-table book -- information is privileged over visuals -- but there's plenty to marvel at, from the Cliff Swallow's elaborate mud colonies that resemble barnacles affixed to rock faces, to the Sooty-Capped Hermit's hanging, counterweighted cup-shaped nest. Our favorites are the examples of biomimicry -- instances of us mirroring nature in our own architecture. But most of the nests are remarkable feats " especially when you consider that they're built with the assistance of a single tool -- a beak -- which, as Goodfellow writes, is a little like ?trying to make a ham and cheese sandwich with one hand behind your back."















