The comprehensive full-colour publication supports the broader project Where Lakes Once Had Water and the artwork tour.
It brought back memories of Enoch Powell's famous “rivers of blood” speech, in which the arch-Tory decried the number of blacks entering Britain in the 1960s; it is widely believed, and not only on the Left, that Powell's so-called ...
... 209 acute mountain sickness ( ACM ) 252 Mumu Island 185 Munda 208 museums & galleries Kainantu Cultural Centre 118 East New Britain Historical & Cultural Centre 166 JK McCarthy Museum 115-16 Kau Rainforest Museum 106 National Museum ...
... 289 Kansas 336 katsura tree 33 Kay, Charles 341 Kentucky 247 Kenya 195 Keynes, John Maynard 352-53 Koford, Carl 163 Koster site, Illinois 182 Krakatoa 18, 26 Kyte, Frank 15 La Brea, California 162, 165 La Salle, René 266 Labrador.
English environmental politician Aubrey Meyer pointed out how this matter is being discussed at the highest levels. ... leading in Meyer's view to “the effective murder of members of the world's poorer populations,” whose lives by the ...
This is an essay that rings the alarm on behalf of the natural world, and asks us to think again about protection of its irreplaceable riches. ‘Such is the depth of public ignorance about Australia’s extinction crisis that most people ...
This is a must-read for anyone interested in our global future. “What Flannery provides—a convincing defense for the position that a path to averting catastrophic climate change still exists—is invaluable.” —Los Angeles Review of ...
Credited with discovering more species than Charles Darwin, Tim Flannery has been hailed as “the rock star of modern science.” Here, he recounts a series of expeditions he made early in his career to the islands of the South Pacific, a ...
A tale of cave bears and comet strikes and a hundred million years of history by the bestselling author of Here on Earth: “Marvelous.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review) In Europe: A Natural History, world-renowned scientist, explorer ...
Like Redmond O’Hanlon’s classics Into the Heart of Borneo and No Mercy, Throwim Way Leg is a tour de force of travel, anthropology, and natural history. “Flannery combines diligent science, heart-pounding adventure, and a respect for ...
Now or Never is a powerful, thought-provoking, and essential book about the most urgent issue of our time.
Shortlisted for the 2020 ABDA Best Designed Children's Non-Fiction and 2020 Environment Award for Children's Literature Longlisted for the 2020 ABIA Book of the Year for Younger Children
Flannery’s message in Sunlight and Seaweed is urgent and his spare prose reflects this.’ Newtown Review of Books ‘Flannery has written in easy-to-understand language and he sets out a positive path for this planet’s future.’ ...
An urgent and essential call to arms from one of Australia’s most respected climate scientists, Tim Flannery.
Tim Flannery is one of the world’s most influential scientists, a foremost expert on climate change credited with discovering more species than Charles Darwin. But Flannery didn’t come to his knowledge overnight.
Can jellyfish become zombies? Are narwhals unicorns? Can a turtle live in a tree? Tim Flannery has the answers.
Internationally renowned author and scientist Tim Flannery explores our planet’s forests and the extraordinary animals that live in them. Can spiders fly? Are dire wolves real? Do chameleons practice magic? Tim Flannery has the answers.
Penetrating, gripping, and provocative, this book combines natural history, anthropology, and ecology on an epic scale. Illustrations.
Get ready to dive into the darkest depths of the sea with real-life explorer and scientist, Professor Tim Flannery.
This groundbreaking book charts the history of the land itself and the forces shaping life on it - including modern humans - to create a portrait of a continent that continues to exert a huge influence on the world today.