Atlas of exploration

by John Hemming

Hardcover, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

G1036 .S12R6 1997

Publication

New York : Oxford University Press, c1997.

Description

The history of exploration is the history of human fascination with the world. Almost from the beginning of humanity, people have felt impelled to venture into unknown regions, displaying incredible endurance and bravery in the face of harsh environments and hostile inhabitants. From thedaring Polynesian navigators who, more than 3000 years ago, first began to advance across the vast Pacific Ocean in dug-out canoes with only the stars to guide them, to the Victorian missionaries and adventurers who opened the way for European colonial expansion, to the scientists of our own time,with their sophisticated navigational and observational technology, explorers have tested their imaginations against an uncharted world.The Oxford Atlas of Exploration is a splendid and authoritative history of this endeavor. With a highly readable and informative text, supported by nearly 100 specially drawn maps and 300 vivid photographs and illustrations, it traces the journeys of the discoverers of our world, recording theirachievements and their varied motives: desire for land, wealth, and fame; missionary zeal; political and cultural empire-building; scientific inquiry; and sheer, irresistible, curiosity.The book begins with the earliest recorded journeys of exploration in Europe, Asia, and Africa, and ranges from the time of the Phoenicians' voyages in the North Atlantic and Egyptians' travels in the Arabian Sea. We follow Cortes in Mexico, La Salle on the Mississippi, Darwin in the GalapagosIslands, James Cook in the Antarctic, and many others. In each section, the main routes of explorers are depicted on graphic relief maps, while photographs, paintings and engravings brilliantly portray the great variety of terrain through which these courageous men and women passed. Also includedare maps from different historical periods which reveal cartographers' growing knowledge of the shape of the world's continents and oceans. The final section of the atlas contains fascinating biographical details of many of the great explorers, geographers, and cartographers whose achievements havesupplied our sense of the shape and texture of the earth. It is followed by a time chart which summarizes the history of exploration over 5000 years.From the High Andes to the ocean depths, from the Sahara desert to the polar ice caps, The Oxford Atlas of Exploration allows us to rediscover all the extraordinary ways humans have come to know their world. Opening its pages is taking the first step on a grand adventure.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member nbmars
This atlas is a wonderful addition to any library. It traces the journeys of explorers from twhen we first know about them, beginning with a section called “Early Exploration.” Thereafter the book is divided geographically, with chapters on Asia, Africa, Central and South America, North
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America, The Pacific, Australia, and New Zealand, The Arctic, The Antarctic, and the ocean. It concludes with a section on “Exploration Today,” a set of thumbnail bios on explorers, and a time line.

The narrative for each section provides background on the cultural backdrop and influences that drove exploration, as well as some in-depth biographical info on individual explorers including paintings or photos of them when available. Most of the coverage takes place between the 15th and 19th Centuries.

Exploration is by its nature an exciting endeavor, and so the stories contained in this book tend to be uniformly interesting, certainly aided by the addition of 100 maps and 300 photos and illustrations.
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Language

Physical description

248 p.; 31 cm

ISBN

019521353X / 9780195213539

Barcode

34662000664521
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