John WisemanWiseman, John. 2004. SAS Survival Handbook: How to Survive in the Wild, in Any Climate, on Land or at Sea. New Edition. New York: HarperResource.J. Wiseman . 2004. "SAS survival handbook: How to survive in the wild, in any climate, on land or at sea", .
作者:John 'Lofty' Wiseman 出版社:Collins; 出版时间:2010-00-00 印刷时间:0000-00-00 页数:384 ISBN:9780007320813 ,购买英文原版 SAS Survival Guide: How to Survive in the Wild, on Land or Sea等外文旧书相关商品,欢迎您到孔夫子旧书网
Without the interconnected global systems we relied on, we'll have to find ways to produce food, medicines, electricity, fuel, and clean water locally.如果没有我们所依赖的互联互通的全球系统,我们就必须想方设法在当地生产食品、药品、电力、燃料和清洁水。Our best bet to survive in the long run ...
How to Survive a Tsunami on the Beach The word tsunami is from Japanese. It describes a series of waves that can reach over100 feet tall and travel at speeds up to 600 miles per hour across the sea. A single wave in a tsunami can be quite long, as much as 60 miles,causing great ...
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Economic depressions made recycling a necessity for many people to survive, as they couldn't afford new goods. In the 1940s, goods such as nylon, rubber and many metals were rationed and recycled to help support the war effort. However, the economic boom of the postwar years caused ...
While many of those recorded no fatalities, the idea of going down like Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet is enough to keep superstitious travelers on dry land. What's even scarier is that cruise ships only account for a tiny percentage of sea vessels that sink. It's believed that tens ...
snow fields and other reflective surfaces [Source:NASA]. But even the 70 percent that gets through doesn't stay on earth forever (otherwise the Earth would become a blazing fireball). The Earth's oceans and land masses eventually radiate heat back out. Some of this heat makes it into spac...
These hand-picked National Geographic stories show how the world is bracing for—and embracing—its future.
Yet, fish and other aquatic animals manage to survive. Animals like seals, penguins, walruses and a wide variety of sea birds are all fish eaters. They live in the Arctic and Antarctic Circle, amidst the icecaps. The land is completely frozen. Yet these animals manage to live in this ...