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Discoveries : the voyages of Captain Cook / Nicholas Thomas.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: London, England ; New York, N.Y. : Allen Lane, 2003Description: xxxvii, 467 pages : illustrations, maps, portraits, facsimiles ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0713995572
  • 9780713995572
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 910.92 22
LOC classification:
  • G420.C65 T562 2003
Contents:
Introduction: History's man -- Pt. 1. England's Atlantic -- 1. Cook's maps -- 2. Bank's books -- Pt. 2. To the South Sea -- 3. Punished Henry Stephens Seaman -- 4. As miserable a set of People as are this day upon Earth -- 5. As favourable to our purpose as we could wish -- 6. In order to seize upon the people -- 7. He was laughed at by the Indians -- 8. An alarming and I may say terrible Circumstance -- 9. The Calamitous Situation we are at present in -- 10. My intentions certainly were not criminal -- Pt. 3. Towards the South Pole -- 11. The Inhospitable parts I am going to -- 12. Mingling my tears with hers -- 13. We are the innocent cause of this war -- 14. The varieties of the human species -- 15. The Southern Hemisphere sufficiently explored -- 16. Now I am going to be confined -- Pt. 4. To the North Pacific -- 17. I allow because I cannot prevent it -- 18. An act that I cannot account for -- 19. They may fear, but never love us -- 20. Squalls and rain and so dark -- 21. A dream that we could not reconcile ourselves to -- Epilogue: Cook's afterlives.
Review: "Captain James Cook was one of the greatest sea explorers of all time. His epic voyages charted the islands of the Pacific, defined the coasts of New Zealand and eastern Australia and ventured into both Arctic and Antarctic ice. His men suffered near shipwreck, were ravaged by tropical diseases and survived frozen oceans. They did all this not for conquest but, as Nicholas Thomas's book shows, to map the unknown and chart new territory."--BOOK JACKET.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 910.92 COO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A354203B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 428-446) and index.

Introduction: History's man -- Pt. 1. England's Atlantic -- 1. Cook's maps -- 2. Bank's books -- Pt. 2. To the South Sea -- 3. Punished Henry Stephens Seaman -- 4. As miserable a set of People as are this day upon Earth -- 5. As favourable to our purpose as we could wish -- 6. In order to seize upon the people -- 7. He was laughed at by the Indians -- 8. An alarming and I may say terrible Circumstance -- 9. The Calamitous Situation we are at present in -- 10. My intentions certainly were not criminal -- Pt. 3. Towards the South Pole -- 11. The Inhospitable parts I am going to -- 12. Mingling my tears with hers -- 13. We are the innocent cause of this war -- 14. The varieties of the human species -- 15. The Southern Hemisphere sufficiently explored -- 16. Now I am going to be confined -- Pt. 4. To the North Pacific -- 17. I allow because I cannot prevent it -- 18. An act that I cannot account for -- 19. They may fear, but never love us -- 20. Squalls and rain and so dark -- 21. A dream that we could not reconcile ourselves to -- Epilogue: Cook's afterlives.

"Captain James Cook was one of the greatest sea explorers of all time. His epic voyages charted the islands of the Pacific, defined the coasts of New Zealand and eastern Australia and ventured into both Arctic and Antarctic ice. His men suffered near shipwreck, were ravaged by tropical diseases and survived frozen oceans. They did all this not for conquest but, as Nicholas Thomas's book shows, to map the unknown and chart new territory."--BOOK JACKET.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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