Talk:Owl
From Academic Kids
Please show me where it says that Bibilographies can not be in the main entry. I will certainly follow this suggestion if there is a consensus, but I feel that just as in printed encyclopedias, bibliographies or additional reading lists are helpful to the reader. --- Since writing this I have found this link Wikipedia:Cite_your_sources which says Biblios at end of article are good and that URLs should be visible for printing . -- Caltrop
Bibliography
- "North American Owls: Biology and Natural History" by Paul A. Johnsgard, ISBN 1560987243, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997
Thanks, Vicki. I had a feeling that owls had some existence outside of the magical world of Harry Potter! -- User:Ed Poor
Here's a complete list of owl scientific names and groupings - maybe someone who knows about taxonomy can find the relevant bits for the article? I never studied biology! http://www.owlpages.com/species/Default.htm
My source for the range and the rewrite of direction-finding ears is, uh, whatever the heck the bird encyclopedia I have is called. I'll give details if anyone doesn't find that reference specific enough. --JerryFriedman 22:36, 27 Jul 2004 (UTC)
