From North Pole to Equator: Studies of Wild Life and Scenes in Many Lands
The red cloth cover corners are bumped and worn as well as the edges and top and bottom of the spine showing wear. The spine has some cracking although the binding is tight. Has 83 illustrations from original drawings.
$67.00
1 in stock
From North Pole to Equator: Studies of Wild Life and Scenes in Many Lands by Alfred Edmund Brehm is a sweeping natural history travelogue that journeys from the chilly arctic regions down through the teeming tropics. In vivid, deeply observed chapters, Brehm explores the tundra of Lapland, the steppes of Siberia, the primeval forests of Central Africa, and the rugged deserts in between. The book describes migrations of mammals, courtship behavior in birds, life among monkeys and apes, and the relationships between geography, climate, and species. Alongside the wildlife, Brehm weaves in human and social landscapes: he reports on nomadic peoples, colonists and exiles, and the natural rhythms of human life among remote forests and rivers. Richly illustrated and rooted in his own lectures and personal observations, the work invites readers to travel across continents, discovering how wild creatures adapt, survive, and flourish in environments vastly different from our own. It balances scientific curiosity with poetic appreciation, making it both informative and deeply evocative.
Additional information
| Weight | 1707 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 18 × 4.5 × 25.5 cm |
| Author | Alfred Edmund Brehm |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Blackie & Son Ltd |
| Published On | 1895 |
| Pages | 592 |
| Country | London: United Kingdom |
| Language | English |
| Dimension | 18cm x 25.5cm |
| Item Weight | 1Kg 707gms |





