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1. Galapagos (Smithsonian Natural History Series) by John Kricher | |
Hardcover: 256
Pages
(2002-09-20)
list price: US$34.95 -- used & new: US$16.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1588340414 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (2)
Excellent value and service
Planning a trip to the Galapagos? Don't miss this book! |
2. Galapagos in 3-D by Mark Blum | |
Hardcover: 96
Pages
(2001-06-01)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$89.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0811831329 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (5)
Enchanting wildlife pictures
A new hero in the 3D World I felt I was back underwater with Mark's book.If these images moved, it would be more thrilling!
Fabulous book with stereo 3-D photos! Fabulous book with stereo 3-D photos! I highly recommended this book for school children and adults alike. I was introduced to the book by a friend and liked it so much that I sought out and bought all of the 3D books by Mark Blum. I find the price so reasonable that I've since bought more to give as gifts. I enjoy looking at the 3-D photos even more than my seven year old boy so I already know several adults and children who will be getting this book as a gift. The technical quality of the photos and printing of the books is very good. A magnifying, stereo viewer is built into a unique bi-fold cover of the book A little research showed that this idea is well over a hundred years old (like stereo photography) but I still find it very innovative because it is so rare and unusual. The photographer has an inspired eye and top technical skill. Not to mention an amazingly adventurous job. The 3D photos make it easy to imagine yourself scuba diving under a school of hammer head sharks! The writing accompanying each image adds to the photos with just the right amount of scientific and general information to serve both young and old reader. I like this book very much and I hope you find this review helpful. I recommend looking for the other 3-D books by Blum. They are all great!
How Cool Can a Picture Book Be?? Explore the wildlife and landscape of the famous Galapagos islands, above and below the ocean's surface. Galapagos in 3-D is filled with beautiful photography with informative captions. But, if you have normal binocular depth perception, you will be absolutely blown away by the amazing 3-D stereo effect. Mark Blum is certainly a leading practioner of the difficult art of stereo photography. He has designed and even built his own specialized cameras. He uses cameras capable of seeing the world from the perspective of a tiny shrimp, or giving the viewer a crystaline sense of depth in a vast scene of cactii spreading out to the horizon. I am especially intrigued by the underwater stereo photographs. The book ends with a magnifacent shot of 2 hammerhead sharks surrounded by a huge shoal of creolefish. The depth effect is incredible! I simply can't recommend Galapagos in 3-D highly enough! All of Mark Blum's books are superb!
Not just for Kids! These are not red/blue lenses! The images are presented in true color stereo pairs and when viewed, merge into a single, dynamic 3D image - WOW! I can't say enough about the overall quality of viewing for ADULTS as well as children. The price is another thing that confuses me. I don't know why these are so inexpensive? I urge anyone who loves nature to buy all of the books in this series! ... Read more |
3. Island Days: Galapagos Island, Christmas Island, Tristan da Cunha by Roger Perry | |
Hardcover: 311
Pages
(2004-09-30)
list price: US$25.00 -- used & new: US$19.55 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1900988801 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
4. Endangered Animals and Habitats - The Galapagos Islands by James Barter | |
Hardcover: 112
Pages
(2002-02-28)
list price: US$28.70 -- used & new: US$11.10 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1560069201 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
5. GALAPAGOS: A Natural History.(Book review): An article from: The Geographical Review by Melissa Wiedenfeld | |
Digital: 4
Pages
(2010-04-01)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$9.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B003SVQGTC Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
6. Animal Geography: South America (Cover-to-Cover Informational Books: Natural World) by Joanne Mattern | |
Library Binding: 56
Pages
(2002-08)
list price: US$17.95 -- used & new: US$14.04 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0756906288 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
7. Plundering Paradise: The Hand Of Man On The Galapagos Islands by Michael D'Orso | |
School & Library Binding:
Pages
(2003-11)
list price: US$23.90 Isbn: 0613918606 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Mention the Galápagos Islands to almost anyone, and the first things that come to mind are iguanas, tortoises, volcanic beaches, and, of course, Charles Darwin. That's what Michael D'Orso imagined when he first traveled there three years ago. What he discovered on these idyllic islands, though, was a tropical paradise under siege from an onslaught of desperately poor South American refugees and corrupt fishing fleets that have brought crime, crowding, pollution, and violence. In a narrative as rich and exotic as the landscape and creatures that frame it, D'Orso tells the story of the odd European adventurers who first settled the Galápagos in the early twentieth century, of the eccentric Americans who arrived in the mid-1950s, of the scientists who dug in a decade after that, and of the ecotourism industry that has burgeoned over the last twenty years. As he explores the conflicts on land and at sea that now threaten to destroy this fabled "Eden of Evolution," D'Orso follows a group of offbeat modern-day islanders:
Plundering Paradise is an inside look at the Galápagos as seen through the eyes of the people who actually live there. It is a story of alarm and of crisis, but also of hope, as the men and women who treasure the beauty and wonder of these ageless islands gather their forces to fight to protect them. Customer Reviews (5)
There is a reason this book is out of print!
PLUNDERING OBJECTIVITY ? The problem I see with the book, however, is that the author shines a negative, unconstructive light on most every single subject that he mentions in a self-serving attempt to add to the impact of the book, even at the expense of loosing objectivity. D'Orso's book is so unreasonably pessimistic on all fronts that one can't help but wonder why, if according to the D'Orso the present and, mostly, the future is so utterly bleak for the Galapagos Islands, have the islands repeatedly been deemed one of the best preserved natural parks in the world or one of the last remaining natural paradises in near pristine condition. The author came to Ecuador during very difficult and trying times for the country. As an Ecuadorian, I readily admit that we are rough around the edges in many ways and that we have a long way to go on some fronts. We do. But D'Orso's journalism, it seems to me, is like going to the US during the LA riots, the ENRON debacle, the Marion Barry scandal, the Exxon Valdez spill, the O.J. soap opera, the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal, etc. and passing all this as everyday America in a book called "Plundering Nation" This would be wrong, wouldn't it? But doing so with mockery and disdain, as D'Orso does, is even less correct ! The Galapagos islands face many threats and what's being done to protect them may not be ultimately sufficient on all accounts, so improvements are becessary. Better controls, more funding and more political compromise may be needed. I do dare say, however, that the current state of the islands and the ongoing control and conservation efforts are a source more for optimism than the other way around. In the past several years introduced animals have been eradicated from several islands, land tortoises, reproduced and bred in captivity, have been repatriated to many islands; marine iguanas have also been bred and repatriated to islands where they were disappearing (as is the case with Baltra Island). Quarantines and controls have been implemented, education efforts have been undertaken, migration bans have been enforced. Several laws which require strong political will have been enacted. The Galapagos have been declared a marine reserve, where industrial fishing is completely off-limits. However, according to the author, the Galapagos are a place were con-men arrive to evade the law..., where there are rusted Toyota's for taxis...(I've been to the Galapagos some 8 times and have never seen a rusted Toyota passing as a taxi!), a place to which Ecuadorians "flee along with their families from Quito and Guayaquil were the streets are awash with poverty and crime and the air stinks of corruption and despair...", etc., I could go on and on with this. One last quote from the book (as it very much describes the scornful spirit with which D'Orso's book was written): "With such riches, there seems to be no reason for this nation to be spiraling downward like the swirl in a flushing toilet..." Bottom line: the book is important and helpful in many ways and rightly unsettling, but its very flawed too.
The Most Invasive Animal "These islands were simply not made for people," D'Orso writes, but he has interviewed a lot of them for this book to portray humans that are making a go of it anyway.Some of them are eccentric, some admirable, but the islands are few, and have desirable properties, and surpassing written law, the law of supply and demand holds sway (just as Darwin knew).Humans have a poor record of improving the lands they have inhabited everywhere, but D'Orso is withering in particular scorn for the corrupt Ecuadorian government, colloquially called "Absurdistan."Such an environment only encourages people to grab any profits they can, and makes impossible long range planning for conserving the islands' resources.Global agencies are reluctant to invest as they can predict how little money would make it to environmental improvement.There has been a proposal that the Galapagos should be under UN trusteeship; after all, it is one of those sites that requires little imagination to view as belonging to the heritage of all humans.From time to time someone suggests banning tourism.Neither proposal is likely to impress those who are currently gaining incomes from things as they stand. D'Orso's book brings an important problem to light.It is written as an entertaining profile of different members of the human species who have washed ashore on Galapagos.There are the ex-hippie who has run a hotel there for thirty-five years, the German recluse, the park ranger who endangers himself by hunting poachers, the charmingly corrupt mayor, the Jehovah's Witness naturalist guide, and more.In describing their activities, he has given a human profile to the islands.It is a sad look, nonetheless.Market forces are no way to run an ecosystem.
tale of greed, poverty, and corruption The Galápagos Islands have the honor of being the only sizable, habitable land mass to remain unpopulated into the 20th century. The islands' lower slopes and some of the smaller islets are a weird moonscape of ancient lava flows devoid of fresh water. Uphill, however, are permanent water sources and soil capable of supporting orange, papaya, and coconut trees, to say nothing of herds of cattle. Despite these lush conditions, no community had attempted to live on the Galápagos until the publication in Germany in 1923 of a travel book called "Galápagos: World's End" that described the islands as a tropical paradise. A few eccentrics came to see for themselves. They have been coming ever since. Take the charmingly corrupt mayor, leader of the 20,000 mostly impoverished Ecuadorians who stretch the ecosystem of the archipelago well beyond its capacity. Mayor Sevilla is only 41, but he grew up on the islands before the advent of automobiles and electricity. "We ate a lot of tortoises," D'Orso quotes him saying. "It was free meat, just roaming around. We didn't understand why people would want to protect the animals when God gave us the animals to eat. Even to this day, I feel this way." Which explains why the mayor lets poachers out of jail as fast as National Park Rangers arrest them. Or take Godfrey Merlen, who stumbled onto the islands in 1970 as an aimless youth working as crew on a rich man's yacht. He stayed, hung around the research station, made himself useful to field scientists, and has become a well-published, highly respected biologist in his own right without ever leaving the islands or taking an advanced degree. D'Orso keeps trying to drag his attention back to the project that brought him here: to write about the more colorful of the gringo inhabitants - the beachcombers, con artists, and barefoot philosophers. But instead, his attention keeps drifting to the real story of these islands in the 21st century. The world's educated elite prizes the Galápagos for their dramatic and unique biology. But they belong to one of the poorest, most overpopulated, and corrupt nations on earth. "Banana republic" is an insufficiently scornful term to describe a political system that not long ago saw three presidencies within an hour. The trouble with Ecuador is nothing new in the world: A small number of very wealthy families manage the country for private profit. These families allow the National Park to exist, but do not, for example, allow the rangers to stop commercial fishing in park waters. The boats take everything: tuna, sea cucumbers, coral, shark fins. (Not the whole shark. They cut the fins off and throw the creatures back to die. Fins fetch astonishing prices in China where shark fin soup is a traditional wedding-banquet delicacy.) D'Orso's casually powerful storytelling draws us in to the grotesquely unequal struggle between a unique and fragile ecosystem and the humans bent on getting rich fast. Not that the environment pays all of the costs. On the outer islands, beyond the reach of law, and far beyond the reach of any kind of medical care, hundreds of desperately poor men dive for sea cucumbers using antiquated, badly maintained scuba gear. No one records how many die every year. No one records the tonnage of sea cucumbers shipped illegally to China, which are bought by men foolish enough to believe that sea cucumbers are an aphrodisiac. Nor is there indication that anyone with power in Ecuador cares, certainly not the legislator who represents the Islands in the national congress. The flat roof of her house is covered with illegally harvested sea cucumbers, curing in the sun. Part travelogue, part history, and part sociological study, D'Orso's story should help shed light on these exotic islands of corruption. Diana Muir is the author of Bullough's Pond
If you want to see the Galapagos, you�ve waited too long. Several astute and eccentric long-time residents of the islands serve as D'Orso's first person commentators, giving him insight in to the islands' history, explaining how they have changed, and commenting on the ecological disasters now unfolding.The disasters are many, and they are getting worse, according to D'Orso.In crisp and unambiguous prose, which he sometimes wields like a truncheon, he excoriates corrupt local officials, judges, and members of the national government.Many of these, he points out, have financial interests in the oil, fishing, boating, and tourism industries, but they also want to be seen as "populist" supporters of the poor immigrants who have flooded the Galapagos looking for a piece of the tourist action.The government, he says, is "so horrifically convoluted and corrupt that onlookers have taken to calling this country 'Absurdistan.'" The introduction of non-native animal species (rats, feral dogs and cats, pigs, goats, and burros), along with foreign insect life (wasps, roaches, and fire ants), and foreign plants (blackberry, lantana, and wild guava bushes) has already permanently changed the environment on which much of the Galapagos wildlife depends.Fishing regulations are wantonly ignored, and penalties are not assessed for violations.Sea cucumbers and other marine life continue to be harvested willy-nilly; fishing boats with long-lines up to 75 miles long continue to hook and kill protected species; and rustbucket oil tankers, never inspected and often owned by highly placed public officials, carry nearly raw petroleum to the islands.They are already responsible for one major oil spill in the formerly pristine islands. Most threatening, however, is the massive influx of economic refugees from the Ecuadorian mainland who have brought the permanent population to twenty thousand (to be thirty thousand by 2010).With a lack of fresh water and adequate sanitation, and the immigrants' single-minded determination to tap into the underwater riches of the Galapagos, the ecological disaster is not just threatening--it's already happened.In a recent uprising, these immigrants physically destroyed the national park and station offices, along with the personal homes of the directors, even ripping out their toilets. D'Orso is passionate in his desire to awaken the world community to the disaster that is taking place before the islands have been totally destroyed.His forecast is bleak, but his message, and his book, are strong.Mary Whipple ... Read more |
8. Galápagos: Webster's Timeline History, 1890 - 2007 by Icon Group International | |
Digital: 27
Pages
(2010-03-10)
list price: US$28.95 -- used & new: US$28.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B003LAV7RQ Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
9. Galapagos: Webster's Timeline History, 1686 - 2007 by Icon Group International | |
Digital: 78
Pages
(2009-07-08)
list price: US$28.95 -- used & new: US$28.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B002JOTQNW Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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10. Animal Geography (Cover-to-Cover Books) by Joanne Mattern | |
Hardcover: 56
Pages
(2002-06)
list price: US$8.95 -- used & new: US$8.94 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 078915675X Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
11. Galapagos Islands: A Unique Ecosystem (Natural Wonders) by Erinn Banting | |
Library Binding: 32
Pages
(2006-07-30)
list price: US$26.00 -- used & new: US$21.53 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 159036449X Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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