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In the summer of 1881, when the ship that dropped off the Lady
Franklin Bay Expedition sailed for home, these twenty-five men
could not have known that only a handful would survive their
three-year assignment. Commanded by Lt. A. W. Greely, this was the
first attempt of the United States to engage in scientific study of
the Arctic. Support of promised re-supply never reached them,
leaving the men abandoned by the very government that had sent them
up. Beset by gelid cold, scurvy, and the madness of starvation the
men start to die. Sgt. Brainard, a man of energy and integrity,
alone possesses the ability to hold off their utter moral
degeneration, yet cannibalism takes place. The author has used
letters and journal entries to ensure immediacy to an Arctic story
that really happened, that pits men, in their fight to stay alive,
against their better selves and the consequences of becoming
bestial.
2014 marks the 50th anniversary of the passing of the Wilderness
Act the landmark piece of legislation to set aside and protect
pristine parts of the American landscape. This anniversary edition
of Wilderness Ethics should help put the many issues surrounding
wilderness in focus."
When Backwood Ethics was first published in 1979, the Watermans'
"new ethic" was enthusiastically received by environmentalists,
hikers, and wilderness managers. This expanded edition brings the
basics of low-impact hiking, camping and cooking, and alpine
management into the 21st century. Here the authors take a fresh
look at ways to protect the physical environment of our mountains
and backcountry.
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