Review
This total picture is of immense significance in documenting an area's importance for birds and measuring its relative value alongside similar, or geographically broader areas. Our knowledge and information allows conservation priorities to be understood, targets to be set, and specific conservation management to be implemented. Atlas data are a key element for reporting on the broader health of our wildlife, and on how well we are doing in protecting it. --Andy Clements, BTO Director
There is a wealth of information to be absorbed from the accounts and maps [...] All of this fascinating information is presented in a well-designed package [...] it may be that the relevance of mapped atlases like Norfolk's new tome will overtake that of conventional county avifaunas. --Dominic Mitchell, Birdwatch Magazine - August 2011
Product Description
Details accounts of summer and winter distributions from extensive fieldwork conducted between 1999-2007. There is a double page spread for each bird, covering over 180 species commonly found in Norfolk, and an additional 63 scarcer or rate changes in distribution since the last Norfolk atlas. Superbly illustrated by local artists and photographers.