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National Geographic
National Geographic – February 1969, Moon Mapping, Ancient Shipwreck, Atlanta
National Geographic – February 1969, Moon Mapping, Ancient Shipwreck, Atlanta
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Vintage, collectible 56+ Years Old edition
Supplements: No
Highlighted Features:
- How We Mapped the Moon – A new Society wall map displays both faces of the moon in unprecedented detail, based on Lunar Orbiter spacecraft photography.
- Ancient Shipwreck Yields New Facts—and a Strange Cargo – Diving on a Roman wreck off southern Italy reveals rarely preserved wood planking and a cargo of marble coffins.
- Atlanta, Pacesetter City of the South – Business and political leaders drive Georgia’s capital into an era of rapid growth.
- Kenya Says "Harambee!" – The Swahili phrase meaning “Let’s all pull together” defines efforts to unite Kenya’s 70 tribes under a central government.
- Awesome Views of the Forbidding Moonscape – Lunar Orbiters photograph 99.6% of the moon’s surface, providing stunning images.
- That Orbèd Maiden... the Moon – Earth’s satellite, long a subject of legend and poetry, now yields to scientific discovery.
Supplements: No
Highlighted Features:
- How We Mapped the Moon – A new Society wall map displays both faces of the moon in unprecedented detail, based on Lunar Orbiter spacecraft photography.
- Ancient Shipwreck Yields New Facts—and a Strange Cargo – Diving on a Roman wreck off southern Italy reveals rarely preserved wood planking and a cargo of marble coffins.
- Atlanta, Pacesetter City of the South – Business and political leaders drive Georgia’s capital into an era of rapid growth.
- Kenya Says "Harambee!" – The Swahili phrase meaning “Let’s all pull together” defines efforts to unite Kenya’s 70 tribes under a central government.
- Awesome Views of the Forbidding Moonscape – Lunar Orbiters photograph 99.6% of the moon’s surface, providing stunning images.
- That Orbèd Maiden... the Moon – Earth’s satellite, long a subject of legend and poetry, now yields to scientific discovery.
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