Title: The Caboose Who Got LooseAuthor: Bill Peet Genre: Trains / Traveling / Children's / Adventure Year Published: 1971 Year Read: 2009Publisher: Houghton Mifflin CompanySource: LibraryContent Rating: Ages 4+ (Nothing Objectionable) “The Caboose Who Got Loose” is a great story from the...
Wulff's Invention of Nature was probably the best book I have read in all of 2017. Although, I knew of Humboldt (and his brother), I had no idea of the extent of his influence on the sciences and of the adventures he went on to gain the deep understanding of the world that he did. I am still amaz...
The Invention of Nature is not flawless (for me the weakest chapter was on Humboldt and Thoreau - but I've always thought Thoreau was over-rated), but it is a fascinating read. Because before Carl Sagan's Cosmos, there was Alexander von Humboldt's Kosmos. (I don't think this is accidental, someho...
The Lost Hero of Science is not hyperbole. It's one of the great tragedies of history that this man's name is no longer on the tip of every man, woman and child's tongue (at least in the English speaking world). I don't know where to begin, but to put it as concisely as possible, read any headlin...
TITLE: The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt's New World AUTHOR: Andrea Wulf Publisher: Knopf Format: e-book ISBN-13: 978-0-385-35067-9 BOOK REVIEW The Invention of Nature by Andrea Wulf is not a complete or in-depth biography, but rather a journey to discover the for...
The Humboldt Current. Humboldt County (CA and NV). Humboldt State University (CA) and Universidad Humboldt (Venezuela). These and the many other "Humboldt" place names aren't honoring different Humboldts. They are all honoring one--Prussian naturalist and explorer Alexander von Humboldt.And while Am...
A scientific expedition had long been Alexander von Humboldt’s dream, so when he stepped onto the shores of Latin America in 1799 he was beyond excited, and soon began exploring, measuring, comparing, questioning, and chronicling everything: the distribution of indigenous plants, barometric pressure...
I get in the mood for gardening and gardening books about this time every year. The book also suits the mood for early Americana. And reading it I was reminded how integral the land and nature were to the human psyche back then. If nothing else there was so much more of it to contend with, and fewer...
I get in the mood for gardening and gardening books about this time every year. The book also suits the mood for early Americana. And reading it I was reminded how integral the land and nature were to the human psyche back then. If nothing else there was so much more of it to contend with, and fewer...
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