Study of the past
Jan 16th, 2022, 3:27 am
On the Edge: Mapping North America's Coasts by Roger M. McCoy
Requirements: .ePUB reader, 4 MB
Overview: With our access to Google Maps, Global Positioning Systems, and Atlases that cover all regions and terrains and tell us precisely how to get from one place to another, we tend to forget there was ever a time when the world was unknown and uncharted–a mystery waiting to be solved.

In On the Edge, Roger McCoy tells the captivating–and often harrowing–story of the 400 year effort to map North America's Coasts. Much of the book is based on the narratives of mariners who sought a passage through the continent to Asia and produced maps as a byproduct of their journeys. These courageous explorers had to rely on the most rudimentary mapping tools and to contend with unimaginably harsh conditions: ship-crushing ice floes; the threat of frostbite, scurvy, and starvation; gold fever and mutiny; ice that could lock them in for months on end; and, inevitably, the failure to find the elusive Northwest passage. Telling the story from the explorers' perspective, McCoy allows readers to see how maps of their voyages were made and why they were so full of errors, as well as how they gradually acquired greater accuracy, especially after the longitude problem was solved. On the Edge tracks the dramatic voyages of John Cabot, John Davis, Captain Cook, Henry Hudson, Martin Frobisher, John Franklin (who nearly starved to death and become known in England as "the man who ate his boots"), and others, concluding with Robert Peary, Otto Sverdrup, and Vihjalmur Steffanson in the early twentieth century.
Genre: Non-Fiction > History

Image

Download Instructions:
https://userupload.net/9qhivlub1oks
https://dropgalaxy.vip/vyq6623zx2nw

Trouble downloading? Read This.
Jan 16th, 2022, 3:27 am