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National Geographic
National Geographic Magazine – June 1972, Aphrodisias, Gypsies, Salt Marshes
National Geographic Magazine – June 1972, Aphrodisias, Gypsies, Salt Marshes
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Vintage, collectible 54+ Years Old edition
Cut or Torn Pages: N (Please assume I missed something)
Supplements: No
Highlighted Features:
- Aphrodisias, Awakened City of Ancient Art – Ten summers of excavation in southwest Turkey unearth a great city of the Greco-Roman age.
- Life and Death in Tana Toradja – Mourners by the thousands celebrate the passing of a nobleman on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.
- When Gypsies Gather at Appleby Fair – For more than two centuries, British Gypsies arrive each June at a little gray-stone town in the north of England to trade horses, sheep, and cattle.
- Fragile Nurseries of the Sea: Can We Save Our Salt Marshes? – Along the U.S. East Coast, urban sprawl, landfill, and pollution endanger the seaside marshes that nurture wildlife, filter out pollutants, and prevent flooding.
- A River Restored: Oregon’s Willamette – Strict waste-control laws have transformed the Pacific Northwest’s most polluted waterway into a river fit for swimming, salmon, and controlled industrial and agricultural use.
Cut or Torn Pages: N (Please assume I missed something)
Supplements: No
Highlighted Features:
- Aphrodisias, Awakened City of Ancient Art – Ten summers of excavation in southwest Turkey unearth a great city of the Greco-Roman age.
- Life and Death in Tana Toradja – Mourners by the thousands celebrate the passing of a nobleman on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.
- When Gypsies Gather at Appleby Fair – For more than two centuries, British Gypsies arrive each June at a little gray-stone town in the north of England to trade horses, sheep, and cattle.
- Fragile Nurseries of the Sea: Can We Save Our Salt Marshes? – Along the U.S. East Coast, urban sprawl, landfill, and pollution endanger the seaside marshes that nurture wildlife, filter out pollutants, and prevent flooding.
- A River Restored: Oregon’s Willamette – Strict waste-control laws have transformed the Pacific Northwest’s most polluted waterway into a river fit for swimming, salmon, and controlled industrial and agricultural use.
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