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Displaying records 91 through 100 of 883 |
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Price: $96.88
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Sale: $4.95
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Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: Jerome D Fellmann::Arthur Getis::Judith Getis::Jon Malinowski
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Publisher: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
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Edition: 8
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Dewey Decimal Number: 304
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Publication Date: 2004-03-11
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Description: A non-major introduction to human/cultural geography that focuses on culture, society, and human activity from a geographic perspective. The book is also designed for majors taking their first course in Human Geography. Fellmann provides a thorough, classic, up-to-date, and balanced approach to this broad range of topics. Among the most distinctive and important features of the text is its thorough and well-integrated coverage of gender roles in society and culture.Instructors and students using the sixth edition update will have access to PowerWeb, a course-specific website developed with the help of instructors teaching the course to provide instructors and students with curriculum-based materials, updated weekly assessments, informative and timely world news, refereed web links and much more.
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Price:
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Sale: $58.90
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Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Louis Pojman
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Publisher: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages
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Edition: 1
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Dewey Decimal Number: 179.1
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Publication Date: 1999-04-02
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Reading Level: 393
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Description: With its thematic focus on �ecolacy,� the understanding of the natural environment and our relationship to it, Pojman�s text strikes a balance between theoretical and applied issues in environmental ethics.
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Price: $35.00
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Sale: $4.81
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Manufacturer: Cornell University Press
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: Reg Morrison
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Publisher: Cornell University Press
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Dewey Decimal Number: 599.93
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Publication Date: 1999-06
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Reading Level: 286
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Description: From famines and deforestation to water pollution, global warming, and the rapid rate of extinction of plants and animals--the extent of the global damage wrought by humankind is staggering. Why have we allowed our environment to reach such a crisis? What produced the catastrophic population explosion that so taxes the earth's resources? Reg Morrison's search for answers led him to ponder our species' astonishing evolutionary success. His extraordinary book describes how a spiritual outlook combined with a capacity for rational thought have enabled Homo sapiens to prosper through the millennia. It convincingly depicts these traits as part of our genetic makeup--and as the likely cause of our ultimate downfall against the inexorable laws of nature. The book will change the way readers think about human evolution and the fate of our species. Small bands of apes walked erect on the dangerous plains of East Africa several million years ago. Morrison marvels that they not only survived, but migrated to all corners of the earth and established civilizations. To understand this feat, he takes us back to a critical moment when these hominids developed language and with it the unique ability to think abstractly. He shows how at this same time they began to derive increasing advantage from their growing sense of spirituality. He convincingly depicts spirituality as an evolutionary strategy that helped rescue our ancestors from extinction and drive the species toward global dominance. Morrison concludes that this genetically productive spirituality, which has influenced every aspect of our lives, has led us to overpopulate the world and to devastate our own habitats. Sobering, sometimes chilling, consistently fascinating, his book offers a startling new view of human adaptation running its natural course.
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Price: $39.00
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Sale: $4.40
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Manufacturer: Westview Press
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Emilio F Moran::Rhonda Gillet-netting::Emilio F. Moran
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Publisher: Westview Press
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Edition: 2nd
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Dewey Decimal Number: 304.2
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Publication Date: 2000-09-15
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Reading Level: 400
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Description: This is the first text to thoroughly cover nongenetic strategies of human adaptation to a variety of ecosystems. Designed to help students understand the multiple levels at which human populations respond to their surroundings, it is the most complete discussion of environmental, physiological, behavioral, and cultural adaptive strategies available. Among the unique features that make Human Adaptability outstanding as both a textbook and a reference are a complete discussion of the development of ecological anthropology and of relevant research methods; the use of an ecosystem approach with emphasis on arctic, high altitude, arid land, grassland, and tropical rain forest environments; the most extensive bibliography on ecological anthropology published to date, with over 700 references both classic and recent; and a comprehensive glossary of technical terms. In this updated edition, the author also addresses the impact of political economy, global environment change, demography, and health in the study of human ecology.
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Price: $35.00
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Sale: $30.75
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Manufacturer: Island Press
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Nicols Fox
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Publisher: Island Press
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Edition: 1
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Dewey Decimal Number: 941
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Publication Date: 2004-10-01
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Reading Level: 424
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Description: From the cars we drive to the instant messages we receive, from debate about genetically modified foods to astonishing strides in cloning, robotics, and nanotechnology, it would be hard to deny technology's powerful grip on our lives. To stop and ask whether this digitized, implanted reality is quite what we had in mind when we opted for progress, or to ask if we might not be creating more problems than we solve, is likely to peg us as hopelessly backward or suspiciously eccentric. Yet not only questioning, but challenging technology turns out to have a long and noble history. In this timely and incisive work, Nicols Fox examines contemporary resistance to technology and places it in a surprising historical context. She brilliantly illuminates the rich but oftentimes unrecognized literary and philosophical tradition that has existed for nearly two centuries, since the first Luddites—the "machine breaking" followers of the mythical Ned Ludd—lifted their sledgehammers in protest against the Industrial Revolution. Tracing that current of thought through some of the great minds of the 19th and 20th centuries—William Blake, Mary Shelley, Charles Dickens, John Ruskin, William Morris, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Robert Graves, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, and many others—Fox demonstrates that modern protests against consumptive lifestyles and misgivings about the relentless march of mechanization are part of a fascinating hidden history. She shows as well that the Luddite tradition can yield important insights into how we might reshape both technology and modern life so that human, community, and environmental values take precedence over the demands of the machine. In Against the Machine, Nicols Fox writes with compelling immediacy—bringing a new dimension and depth to the debate over what technology means, both now and for our future.
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Manufacturer: George Braziller
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Tim F. Flannery
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Publisher: George Braziller
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Dewey Decimal Number: 508.9
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Publication Date: 1995-10
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Reading Level: 423
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Description: Humans first settled the islands of Australia, New Zealand, New Caledonia, and New Guinea some sixty millennia ago, and as they had elsewhere across the globe, immediately began altering the environment by hunting and trapping animals and gathering fruits and vegetables. In this illustrated iconoclastic ecological history, acclaimed scientist and historian Tim Flannery follows the environment of the islands through the age of dinosaurs to the age of mammals and the arrival of humanity on its shores, to the coming of European colonizers and the advent of the industrial society that would change nature's balance forever. Penetrating, gripping, and provocative, The Future Eaters is a dramatic narrative history that combines natural history, anthropology, and ecology on an epic scale. "Flannery tells his beautiful story in plain language, science-popularizing at its Antipodean best." -- Times Literary Supplement "Like the present-day incarnation of some early-nineteenth-century explorer-scholar, Tim Flannery refuses to be fenced in." -- Time
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Price: $71.00
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Sale: $22.40
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Manufacturer: Allyn & Bacon
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Daniel G. Bates
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Publisher: Allyn & Bacon
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Edition: 3
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Dewey Decimal Number: 304.2
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Publication Date: 2004-07-08
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Reading Level: 272
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Description: Based on Bates' Cultural Anthropology, this book provides a framework for analyzing cultures based on their economic systems. Cultural ecology is the study of human behavior and culture within an environmental context. It examines how humans adapt to their environment and how the environment shapes culture. Based on a selection of materials from Bates and Fratkin's Cultural Anthropology, Third Edition, Human Adaptive Strategies uses case studies to show how cultures evolved within the context of their environment and how their methods of surviving in their environment have affected other aspects of their culture. One reviewer says, "Concentrating, as the book does, on subsistence patterns and cultural ecology, it creates a conceptual structure conducive to the needs of the introductory student in anthropology." The new third edition includes an expanded discussion of basic ecological concepts and ecosystem components and organization; expanded material on population related issues; and addresses in some depth the controversy involving Napolean Chagnon's work as it touches on a number of important aspects of scholarship and research.
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Price: $45.00
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Sale: $25.00
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Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Gary E. Varner
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Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
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Dewey Decimal Number: 170
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Publication Date: 2002-03-21
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Reading Level: 164
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Description: This book offers a powerful response to what Varner calls the "two dogmas of environmental ethics"--the assumptions that animal rights philosophies and anthropocentric views are each antithetical to sound environmental policy. Allowing that every living organism has interests which ought, other things being equal, to be protected, Varner contends that some interests take priority over others. He defends both a sentientist principle giving priority to the lives of organisms with conscious desires and an anthropocentric principle giving priority to certain very inclusive interests which only humans have. He then shows that these principles not only comport with but provide significant support for environmental goals.
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Price:
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Sale: $9.98
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Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: William P Cunningham::Mary Ann Cunningham::Barbara Woodworth Saigo
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Publisher: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
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Edition: 8
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Dewey Decimal Number: 577
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Publication Date: 2004-02-13
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Reading Level: 624
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Description: This book is intended for use in a one- or two-semester course in environmental science, human ecology, or environmental studies at the college or advanced placement high school level. Because most students who will use this book are freshman or sophomore nonscience majors, the authors have tried to make the text readable and accessible without technical jargon or a presumption of prior science background. At the same time, enough data and depth are presented to make this book suitable for many upper-division classes and a valuable resource for students who will keep it in their personal libraries after their formal studies are completed. The goal of this book is to provide an up-to-date, introductory view of essential themes in environmental science along with emphasis on details and case studies that will help students process and retain the general principles.
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Manufacturer: Unwin Hyman
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: Tommy Carlstein
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Publisher: Unwin Hyman
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Dewey Decimal Number: 304.2
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Publication Date: 1982-02
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Reading Level: 444
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Displaying records 91 through 100 of 883
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