LIFE

LIFE
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 144
Release: 1969-09-19
Genre:
ISBN:

LIFE Magazine is the treasured photographic magazine that chronicled the 20th Century. It now lives on at LIFE.com, the largest, most amazing collection of professional photography on the internet. Users can browse, search and view photos of today’s people and events. They have free access to share, print and post images for personal use.

Rare Earth Frontiers

Rare Earth Frontiers
Author: Julie Michelle Klinger
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2018-01-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1501714619

Owing to their unique magnetic, phosphorescent, and catalytic properties, rare earths are the elements that make possible teverything from the miniaturization of electronics, to the enabling of green energy and medical technologies, to supporting essential telecommunications and defense systems. An iPhone uses eight rare earths for everything from its colored screen, to its speakers, to the miniaturization of the phone?s circuitry. On the periodic table rare earth elements comprise a set of seventeen chemical elements (the fifteen lanthanides plus scandium and yttrium). There would be no Pokémon Go without rare earths. Rare Earth Frontiers is a work of human geography. Klinger looks historically and geographically at the ways rare earth elements in three discrete but representative and contested sites are given meaning.

The Moon

The Moon
Author: Richard Anthony Proctor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 354
Release: 1898
Genre: Moon
ISBN:

Geography and Vision

Geography and Vision
Author: Denis Cosgrove
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2012-11-25
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 085771290X

Leading geographer Denis Cosgrove provides a series of personal reflections on the complex connections between seeing, imagining and representing the world geographically. In a series of eloquent essays he draws upon pictorial images - including maps, sketches, cartoons, paintings, and photographs - to explore and elaborate upon the many and varied ways in which the vast and varied earth, and at times the heavens beyond, have been both imagined and represented as a place of human habitation. The essays include reflections upon geographical discovery; urban cartography and utopian visions; ideas of landscape and the shaping of America; wilderness and masculinity; conceptions of the Pacific; and the imaginative grip of the Equator. Extensively illustrated, this engaging work reveals the richness of the geographical imagination as expressed over the past five centuries.

Landscapes of Culture and Nature

Landscapes of Culture and Nature
Author: R. Giblett
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 215
Release: 2009-09-29
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 0230250963

A bold and exciting exploration of the relationship and interactions between humans, the human landscape and the earth, looking at a diverse range of case studies from the nineteenth-century city to the Asian tsunami and Hurricane Katrina.