Great explorers : Discovering the world / by Jim Pipe
Material type:
TextPublication details: Oxford : Oxford University Press ; 2008.Edition: First published 2008Description: 128 pages : color illustrations , maps ; 28 cmISBN: - 9780199118809
- 910.9
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| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Footprints International School Library Network Toul Kork Campus TTP Secondary Non-Fiction Bookshelves | Non-Fiction | PIP 910.9 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | FISSE01200 |
Browsing Footprints International School Library Network Toul Kork Campus shelves,Shelving location: TTP Secondary Non-Fiction Bookshelves ,Collection: Non-Fiction Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
| PEA 591.1 QH313.P38 Why is a frog not a toad ? : discovering the differecnces between animal look-alikes / | PER 940.4 D522.P397 World War I / | PER 940.53 World War II : ten greatest battles / | PIP 910.9 Great explorers : Discovering the world / | POL 959.7043 DS557.7 The Vietnam War / | POS 510 The Mean and Vulgar Bits / | POS 510 QA99.P67 Guaranteed to bend your brain / |
Just as the unknown regions of the world seized the imagination of the great explorers, so the exploits of those explorers continue to fascinate readers today. The book captures all the thrill of exploration; its fears, dangers and hardships; encounters with hostile landscapes and peoples, andthe excitement of progress. All areas of the globe are covered and the journeys of explorers both famous and not so famous: Florence Baker in Egypt and Sudan; Mary Kingsley in West Africa; Lewis and Clark across the US; Franklin and Leary at the North Pole and Amundsen and Scott at the South. Thebook is arranged by region, and chronologically within that region. It captures the spirit of each age and explains how explorers, through reaching lands unknown to them, encountered peoples supporting advanced civilizations of their own. The final chapter examines the legacy of a region'sexploration, by explaining its political, economic and other consequences, whether they be the settlement of a continent or the creation of lasting national myths, as in Scott's doomed mission to Antarctica.
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