The Quiet World Saving Alaska's Wilderness Kingdom 1879-1960 Douglas Brinkley
The Quiet World is an epic history of the grassroots activists and artists who, with the U.S. federal government, saved vast reaches of wild Alaska from 1879 to 1960. Beginning with naturalist John Muir, who explored the towering glaciers of the Inside Passage, and ending with President Dwight Eisenhower, who created the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), Brinkley showcases how extraction industry bigwigs were outfoxed by a colorful gallery of "wilderness believers," including Bull Moose presidential canidate Theodore Roosevelt, indomitable U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, photographer Ansel Adams, U.S. Fish and Wildlife biologist Rachel Carson, and many others. Brinkley also details conservationists' inspiration to protect Alaska's natural resources for future generations and tells incredible stories of its wildlife.
Early Warming " A vitally necessary ... account of what's already happening in those places the rest of us still think of as wild and untouched."
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Alaska Park Science: Monitering the Vital Signs of Healthy Park Ecosystems This issue presents a sampling of the many vital signs now being monitored. Price: $5.00 Member price: $4.25 Details
Forest Service and the Greatest Good A history of the U. S. Forest Service at its 100th Anniversary.
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