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Planet Earth

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    book


    London : Jonathan Cape, 2002 - 232 s. : il., mapy ; 29 cm
    ISBN 0-224-069160
     dálkový průzkum Země  satelitní snímky  Země
     fotografie  obrazové publikace
    Call numberB 43.855
    Umístění 911 - Obecný zeměpis. Fyzický zeměpis. Kulturní zeměpis
    Planet Earth
    BranchPlaceInfoSignature
    Lidická ( sklad )k vypůjčeníB 43.855   

    Title statementPlanet Earth / introduction by Robert Hugnes
    Main entry-corp. Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (Author)
    Issue dataLondon : Jonathan Cape, 2002
    Phys.des.232 s. : il., mapy ; 29 cm
    ISBN0-224-069160
    Subj. Headings dálkový průzkum Země * satelitní snímky * Země * struktura Země
    Form, Genre fotografie * obrazové publikace
    Conspect77 - Fotografie. Fotografické postupy
    UDC 77.058.1:629.783 , 528.8 , 551.1 , 77
    CountryVelká Británie
    Languageangličtina
    Ve volném výběru911 - Obecný zeměpis. Fyzický zeměpis. Kulturní zeměpis
    Document kindBOOKS
    Planet Earth
    Once we used to watch space from Earth. Now we can watch the Earth from space. It is half a century since the first satellites beamed back their information. Space offers us a position from which we can look at ourselves and our ecosphere. We can record the transformation of our habitat - the drying of river estuaries, the disappearance of islands beneath the sea, the melting of polar icecaps. We can see the Earth as a single breathing entity. Planet Earth is a collection of astonishing satellite imagery that has been gathered by the German Space Centre in collaboration with space centres from Mexico to India and with its partners at NASA. The photographs have been made by machines in space, not by intrepid astronauts. The photographs have been processed through computers and can reveal more than is normally visible to the human eye - the floor of the ocean bed, geological strata and the eye of the hurricane. At first Planet Earth appears as a catalogue of the unfamiliar. Much of the information is astoundingly beautiful but unrecognisable. Gradually, as the captions are read, the data is translated, then the shapes and colours begin to become legible. The evidence of civilisations emerges - the Rock of Jerusalem, the Pyramids and the Coliseum. Planet Earth is the logical sequel to Full Moon, published by Jonathan Cape in 1999 on the thirtieth anniversary of the moon landing. Full Moon was the narrative of a journey to the Moon and a return to Earth. Planet Earth is an information bank. It has no narrative, only data. Planet Earth marks the arrival home. Zdroj anotace: Web obalkyknih.cz
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Number of the records: 1  

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