Across the Tibetan Plateau: Ecosystems, Wildlife, & Conservation Contributor(s): Fleming, Robert L. (Author), Tsering, Dorje (Author), Wulin, Liu (Author) |
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ISBN: 0393061175 ISBN-13: 9780393061178 Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company OUR PRICE: $44.96 Product Type: Hardcover Published: October 2007 Annotation: Remarkable photographs celebrate the wild places and the exquisite animals of the country called "the roof of the world." Here is the most comprehensive photography to date of a little-known and seldom-visited land whose area equals western Europe. The beauty and diversity of Tibet is staggering: from Mount Everest to the world's deepest gorge, from tropical jungles to arctic-like tundra, from trees twenty feet in diameter to vast herds and solitary specimens of some of the least-known animals on the planet. Certain photographs, such as those of a newborn Tibetan antelope or the elusive red ghoral, are among the first ever taken of these subjects. The book brings American, Tibetan, and Chinese scholarship to bear on the natural history of Tibet, and it also describes an extraordinary conservation accomplishment that has gone virtually unnoticed by the outside world. Where else has 40 percent of the land been set aside in nature preserves in twenty years? As a result of this effort, the animals and landscapes shown here will be saved for future generations. Color illustrations throughout. |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Travel | Asia - General - Nature | Ecology - Travel | Pictorials (see Also Photography - Subjects & Themes - Regional) |
Dewey: 508.515 |
LCCN: 2006048321 |
Physical Information: 0.7" H x 14.14" W x 10.28" (2.99 lbs) 120 pages |
Themes: - Cultural Region - Asian |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: Here is the most comprehensive photography to date of a little-known and seldom-visited land whose area equals western Europe. The beauty and diversity of Tibet is staggering: from Mount Everest to the world's deepest gorge, from tropical jungles to arctic-like tundra, from trees twenty feet in diameter to vast herds and solitary specimens of some of the least-known animals on the planet. Certain photographs, such as those of a newborn Tibetan antelope or the elusive red ghoral, are among the first ever taken of these subjects. The book brings American, Tibetan, and Chinese scholarship to bear on the natural history of Tibet, and it also describes an extraordinary conservation accomplishment that has gone virtually unnoticed by the outside world. Where else has 40 percent of the land been set aside in nature preserves in twenty years? As a result of this effort, the animals and landscapes shown here will be saved for future generations. |
Contributor Bio(s): Carter, Jimmy: - Jimmy Carter was the thirty-ninth president of the United States (1977-1981) and was the 2002 recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. He lives in Plains, Georgia.Fleming, Robert L.: - Robert L. Fleming Jr. is professor of equity and empowerment at Future Generations and a leading Himalayan natural historian.Wulin, Liu: - Liu Wulin grew up in Tibet and has been conducting research and fieldwork there for twenty years.Tsering, Dorje: - Dorje Tsering is a scholar and the senior leader of the Tibet Autonomous Region Department of Science and Technology. |