Antarctica: An Encyclopedia (2 Volume Set) (Second edition)
✍ Scribed by John Stewart
- Publisher
- McFarland & Co Inc Pub
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 1773
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This second edition of the 1990 Library Journal "Best Reference" book, four years in the compiling and writing, is an exhaustive A-Z direct-entry encyclopedia of Antarctica. It doubles the first edition's entries to 30,000, covering geographical features, historical events, explorers, expeditions, airplanes, ships, scientists, scientific stations, tour operators, scientific terms, birds, animals, insects, flora, items of general interest and much more. "Antarctica" is defined as all land and water south of 60°S. Information for geographical features is drawn primarily from national gazetteers, both current and old, and is not limited to ÂEnglish-Âlanguage sources. Extensive cross-referencing simplifies the continent's often bewildering nomenclature--geographical features' names, for example, may vary widely from one national gazetteer to the next, and are further complicated by having been named and renamed multiple times, and in many languages, through the years. All linguistic variations of placenames are included and cross-referenced. First Edition Award: A Library Journal Best Reference
✦ Table of Contents
Cover......Page 1
Volume 1......Page 6
Acknowledgments......Page 7
Preface......Page 8
A Note on Alphabetization......Page 9
The Encyclopedia A-K......Page 10
Volume 2......Page 900
Encyclopedia L-Z......Page 904
Bibliography......Page 1764
✦ Subjects
Науки о Земле;География;Справочники и энциклопедии;Энциклопедии
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This edition of the successful Encyclopedia of Creativity served to establish the study of creativity as a field in itself. Now completely updated and revised in a 2e, coverage encompasses the definition of creativity, the development and expression of creativity across the lifespan, the environment
Since the first edition, the research literature on aging continues to expand rapidly, reflecting both the rising interest of the scientific community and also the needs of a growing older population. In the year 1900, persons over 65 years of age were the smallest portion of developed societies. To