Books
Wilderness: Earth's Last Wild Places
- Item Number
- 201
- Estimated Value
- 75 USD
- Sold
- 30 USD to fiddleabout
- Number of Bids
- 2 - Bid History
Item Description
Conservation International's book Hotspots placed that organization at the forefront of global conservation efforts. Wilderness: Earth's Last Wild Places continues the efforts made in that previous volume, combining nearly 300 breathtaking images of untamed lands and rare glimpses of the people who inhabit them with the most current scientific analyses of their endangered ecosystems.
To qualify as "wilderness," the areas included must have 70% or more of their original vegetation, cover at least 10,000 square kilometers, and have fewer than five people per square kilometer. Wilderness identifies 37 wilderness areas around the globe including tropical rain forests, wetlands, deserts, and arctic tundra, and presents the research of nearly 200 specialists carried out over two years by Conservation International's Center for Applied Biodiversity Science with support from it's Global Conservation Fund. The result is a detailed document of the biological riches that can be found in each of the wilderness areas, with chapters that describe and illustrate them, highlight the human cultures unique to each area, and explain the threats to each region and the conservation measures in place.
The result of a collaboration among CEMEX, Conservation International, and Agrupacin Sierra Madre, Wilderness presents vital information on the Earth's biodiversity and a realistic program of conservation complemented by state-of-the-art photography.
Authors: Russell Mittermeier, Cristina Goettsch Mittermeier, Patricio Robles Gil, Gustavo Fonseca, Thomas Brooks, John Pilgrim, and William R. Konstant.
Item Special Note
The winning bidder can arrange to pick up the item at the National Zoo. Please email: store.inquiry@si.edu to arrange your pick-up. Otherwise, the bidder is responsible for the Shipping and Handling fee, which will be added to the winning bid amount.
Donated By:
Conservation International
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