Authors >
Raymond Coppinger

Raymond Coppinger

Raymond Coppinger

X Are you a fan?

Find out about new releases by this author, recommendations, special offers, and more.

Dogs will be released on May 27, 2001 in Hardcover
May 27, 2001
Dogs is now available in Hardcover
May 27, 2001
Dogs will be released on May 27, 2001 in
May 27, 2001
Dogs is now available in
May 27, 2001
Excerpt:
Table of Contents from Dogs
Prior to Dec 19, 2008

Authors on the Web

Sandoval Signpost, December 29, 2012
...bark? The old New Englander says, Well, just for the hell of it, I suppose. According to biologist Raymond Coppinger and linguist Mark Feinstein in Smithsonian Magazine, the old-timer may be right. Whats your explanation for the incessant barking of some...
Sandoval Signpost, December 29, 2012
...bark? The old New Englander says, Well, just for the hell of it, I suppose. According to biologist Raymond Coppinger and linguist Mark Feinstein in Smithsonian Magazine, the old-timer may be right. Whats your explanation for the incessant barking of some...
Sandoval Signpost, December 29, 2012
...Wymore The old New Englander says, Well, just for the hell of it, I suppose. According to biologist Raymond Coppinger and linguist Mark Feinstein in Smithsonian Magazine, the old-timer may be right. Whats your explanation for the incessant barking of...
Sandoval Signpost, December 29, 2012
...bark? The old New Englander says, Well, just for the hell of it, I suppose. According to biologist Raymond Coppinger and linguist Mark Feinstein in Smithsonian Magazine, the old-timer may be right. Whats your explanation for the incessant barking of some...
Red Orbit, December 28, 2012
...dog, responsible for their own domestication, required thousands of years to warm to their new best friends. Biologist Raymond Coppinger, who has spent over 45 years working with and studying dogs, postulates the taming process of the gray wolf began at...
Red Orbit, December 28, 2012
...dog, responsible for their own domestication, required thousands of years to warm to their new best friends. Biologist Raymond Coppinger, who has spent over 45 years working with and studying dogs, postulates the taming process of the gray wolf began at...
Bakersfield Californian, September 29, 2012
...dogs appear to bark at nothing at all. According to a 1991 research article in the "Smithsonian" by Raymond Coppinger, Ph.D., and Mark Feinstein, early dogs were probably scavengers that hung around human habitations, eating waste produced by humans....