Mysteries of the Gobi - John Hare

Mysteries of the Gobi

Searching for Wild Camels and Lost Cities in the Heart of Asia

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
256 Seiten
2008 | Rebrand to Tauris Parke on reprint
I.B. Tauris (Verlag)
978-1-84511-512-8 (ISBN)
23,65 inkl. MwSt
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The Gobi is the largest, coldest and driest desert in Asia. Its shifting sands conceal ancient cities, 3,000-year-old mummies, dinosaur bones and areas where no man has set foot. This title tells the story of an epic migration made by Kazakh nomads in flight from Chinese communists.
John Hare is a star author and one of the most well-known explorers of his generation. The Gobi is a perennially fascinating part of the world - a desert that people love to read about. China, the environment/natural world, exploration and discovery: broad and topical appeal.The Gobi is the largest, coldest and driest desert in Asia. Its shifting sands conceal ancient cities, 3,000-year-old mummies, dinosaur bones and areas where no man has set foot. It is also the last place on earth where the wild Bactrian camel clings to survival, its fragile habitat threatened by poachers and development. With the conservation of this elusive creature in mind, John Hare was inspired to venture into the wildest parts of the Chinese Gobi on an expedition during which they crossed a hundred miles of sand dunes, unexplored in recorded history. Several weeks into the journey, Hare and the team discovered, in two unmapped valleys, a population of wildlife with no experience of man.Interwoven with the account of his remarkable journey, Hare tells, for the first time, the story of an epic migration made by Kazakh nomads in flight from Chinese communists and describes the historic and current tensions between the Chinese and the indigenous Uighur population of Xinjiang.
A blend of history and high adventure, discovery and conservation, "Mysteries of the Gobi" is a unique and compelling account of modern-day exploration.

John Hare is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and the Explorers Club of America. As well as living and working in Africa for many years, he has made several expeditions to the Mongolian Gobi and China's remote Xinjiang Province. He was the first foreigner to be invited to visit Lop Nur for over 45 years and the first foreigner in recorded history to cross the Gashun Gobi from north to south. In 1997 he founded the Wild Camel Protection Foundation and, with Chinese colleagues, established a 175,000 square kilometre Nature Reserve in Mongolia for the wild Bactrian camel. He is the author of 'The Lost Camels of Tartary' and 'Shadows across the Sahara'.

Preface * The Call of the Wild * Beyond the Dunes * Sweet as Eden is the Air * Take Flight and Follow * Hie to the Deserts Wild * Death’s Shadow at the Door * Over the Unknown Pass * The Desert’s Dusty Face * The Secrets of the Sands * Greater than Anyone Thinks * Appendix 1 - The Current Situation of the Uighurs in Xinjiang * Appendix 2 - The First Published Account of the Wild Bactrian Camel by Colonel Nikolai Mikhailovich Przhevalsky * Appendix 3 - Spies among the Kazakhs * Bibliography * Acknowlegements *

Erscheint lt. Verlag 30.10.2008
Zusatzinfo 18 in 8pp colour plate section
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Reisen Reiseberichte Asien
ISBN-10 1-84511-512-0 / 1845115120
ISBN-13 978-1-84511-512-8 / 9781845115128
Zustand Neuware
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