![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
A glittering geographic tour of the remarkable history, peoples, climate, creatures, sights and sounds of the largest and most austere desert on earth. Ten thousand years ago, the Sahara was a temperate grassland - petrified trees mark where forests used to stand, and former riverbeds are rich in the petrified bones of hippos, elephants, zebras and gazelles. Then a slight shift in the earth's axis transformed it into the greatest desert in the world with astonishing speed. Massive sand dunes are continuously formed and dissolved by fierce winds, making the ever-shifting topography of the desert more uncertain and hazardous to navigate. The inhabitants of this desolate terrain barely eke out a living. Throughout the millennia, diverse populations have struggled to make this severe landscape home. Marq de Villiers and Sheila Hirtle chronicle the desert's nations and peoples and legacies they have left to the sand: stone circles older than Stonehenge; Roman aqueducts; remnants of Greek fields and vineyards, and the ruins of palaces and temples along the Royal Road, a once busy trading route for gold and salt, resources that fuelled the economies of the great empires of Old Africa before centuries of conquests, religious wars and tribal turf battles destroyed them. Illuminated by written testimonies of past travellers, 'Sahara' conveys the majesty, mystery and abundance of the desert's life in an evocative biography of the land and its people.
In Hell and Damnation , bestselling author Marq de Villiers takes readers on a journey into the strange richness of the human imaginings of hell, deep into time and across many faiths, back into early Egypt and the 5,000-year-old Mesopotamian epic of Gilgamesh. This urbane, funny, and deeply researched guide ventures well beyond the Nine Circles of Dante's Hell and the many medieval Christian visions into the hellish descriptions in Islam, Buddhism, Jewish legend, Japanese traditions, and more.
Tsunami, earthquake, hurricane, pandemic-are these and other natural calamities more probable, and more frequent, than they were? Are things getting worse? De Villiers examines these questions in a time when we truly need to understand the dangers ahead and how to act in such a way that we're preparing for the inevitable and not making things worse.
In the parched and seemingly lifeless heart of the Sahara desert,
earthworms find enough moisture to survive. Four major mountain
ranges interrupt the flow of dunes and gravel plains, and at
certain times waterfalls cascade from their peaks. Even the sand
amazes: massive dunes can appear almost overnight, and be gone just
as quickly. We think we know the Sahara, the largest and most
austere desert on Earth--yet it is full of surprises, as Marq de
Villiers reveals in his brilliant and evocative biography of the
land and its people.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Avengers: 4-Movie Collection - The…
Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, …
Blu-ray disc
R589
Discovery Miles 5 890
|