rdfs:comment
| - جون ليفينجستون (بالفرنسية: John Livingston) (و. 1923 – 2006 م) هو عالم طبيعة كندي، ولد في هاميلتون، توفي عن عمر يناهز 83 عاماً. (ar)
- John Allen Livingston né le 10 novembre 1923 et mort le 17 janvier 2006 , est un naturaliste canadien, animateur de télévision, écrivain, et professeur. Il était connu au Canada pour faire la voix off de la série zoologique dans les années 1960. (fr)
- John Allen Livingston (November 10, 1923 – January 17, 2006) was a Canadian naturalist, broadcaster, author, and teacher. He was most known as the voice-over of the Hinterland Who's Who series of television zoological shorts in the 1960s. Livingston was the author of several books, including The Fallacy of Wildlife Conservation (1981) and the Governor General's Award-winning Rogue Primate (1994). In his later years, he was a professor emeritus of environmental studies at York University. (en)
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has abstract
| - جون ليفينجستون (بالفرنسية: John Livingston) (و. 1923 – 2006 م) هو عالم طبيعة كندي، ولد في هاميلتون، توفي عن عمر يناهز 83 عاماً. (ar)
- John Allen Livingston né le 10 novembre 1923 et mort le 17 janvier 2006 , est un naturaliste canadien, animateur de télévision, écrivain, et professeur. Il était connu au Canada pour faire la voix off de la série zoologique dans les années 1960. (fr)
- John Allen Livingston (November 10, 1923 – January 17, 2006) was a Canadian naturalist, broadcaster, author, and teacher. He was most known as the voice-over of the Hinterland Who's Who series of television zoological shorts in the 1960s. Born in Hamilton, Ontario, he enlisted in the Royal Canadian Navy at the beginning of World War II and earned a degree in English literature in 1943 while on active service. He joined the Audubon Society of Canada in 1955 as managing director and editor of its newsletter. He later became head of the science unit at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), most notably serving as the first executive producer of the long-running documentary series The Nature of Things. He left the CBC in 1968, but remained an occasional contributor of documentary films to The Nature of Things, most notably the Canadian Film Award-winning Wild Africa in 1970. He then formed LDL: Environmental Research Associates, an environmental consulting company, with Aird Lewis and Bill Gunn of the Nature Conservancy of Canada; the firm became most noted for their work on the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry. Livingston was the author of several books, including The Fallacy of Wildlife Conservation (1981) and the Governor General's Award-winning Rogue Primate (1994). In his later years, he was a professor emeritus of environmental studies at York University. (en)
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