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National Geographic Atlas of the World, Eighth Edition

National Geographic Atlas of the World, Eighth Edition
Author: National Geographic
Publisher: National Geographic
Category: Book

List Price: $165.00
Buy New: $103.95
You Save: $61.05 (37%)



Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 26 reviews
Sales Rank: 11950

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 8
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 416
Shipping Weight (lbs): 9.8
Dimensions (in): 19.3 x 12.7 x 1.4

ISBN: 0792275438
Dewey Decimal Number: 912
EAN: 9780792275435

Publication Date: October 1, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
When National Geographic published its first Atlas of the World more than 35 years ago, the world was indeed a different place. In order to cover today's world--including its oceans, stars, climate, natural resources, and more--National Geographic has published its seventh edition of the Atlas of the World. With each new edition, National Geographic strives to make its atlas more than just maps. You'll learn that the coldest place in the world is the Plateau Station in Antarctica, where the average daily temperature is minus 56.7 degrees Celsius; the most populated continent is Asia, with more than 3.6 billion people, or 60.8 percent of the world's population; the driest place on earth is the Atacama Desert in Chile; a flight from New Delhi to Rio de Janeiro covers 14,080 kilometers; life expectancy in the Republic of Zambia is 37 years; and the literacy rate in Turkmenistan is 98 percent.

Flip through the pages of this impressive book and you will feel as though the world is literally at your fingertips. Full-page spreads are devoted to more than 75 political and physical maps (political maps show borders; physical maps show mountains, water, valleys, and vegetation). There are many new touches to be found in this edition, including increased usage of satellite images, an especially helpful feature when researching the most remote regions of the earth; more than 50 updated political maps that record the impact of wars, revolutions, treaties, elections, and other events; and the use of the latest research on topics such as tectonics, oceanography, climate, and natural resources. The sheer size of the atlas's index--134 pages--offers insight into just how much information is packed into 260-plus pages. The book is so physically large, in fact, that when it's open, the reader is staring at three square feet of information, a surface area larger than many television screens. The potential uses of this book for a family are vast, from settling a friendly argument to completing a school report. In the end, though, the atlas is still mostly about maps. Pages and pages of maps. Maps that force us to see how wonderful and dynamic our world is. Maps that remind us of where we've been and where we'd still like to go. --John Russell

Product Description
Combining state-of-the-art cartographic technology and information with dynamic and diverse physiographic and cultural content, the Eight Edition is National Geographic's most accurate and interesting record of the world yet. The opening section, Ninety Years of Mapping at National Geographic, traces the founding of Geographic cartography to the present advances in technology and the practice of compiling and organizing geographic information. The atlas truly begins with three stunning new, full-spread world maps, that drape Earth's surface seamlessly with satellite imagery, then physical and natural features, and finally today's political world of countries and growing cities.World thematic topics are organized into two groups: the Physical and Natural World and Human Activities. The Physical and Natural World section includes captivating core topics such as the evolution of earth, geology and tectonics, climate and weather, oceans, world water, the bioshere, and biodiversity. Human Activities covers 11 world themes: population, migration and refugees, conflict and terrorism, cultures, economy, energy and minerals, communications, food, health and education, the environment, and ending with wildlands. All of these intriguing spreads reflect the most authoritative and recent data available and are reviewed by preeminent scholars and experts. Lined up after the world thematic focus is the continental division. All seven continents open with views from space and are then represented with separate physical and political maps. Larger scale regions of each continent are presented for higher definition and detail. Because of our primary readership, additional coverage is given to the United States and Canada. An entirely new component to the Eighth Edition is the city section. Maps and text discussing urban explosion will open this compilation of sixty new maps. Pictures, fact boxes, and text will accompany each city map to create colorful and informative portraits of our built environment. Selected cites such as, New York, Mexico City-the most densely populated city in the world, and Paris will receive more detailed scaling. Less familiar and remote areas of the world and beyond-the poles, the ocean floors, and space-are mapped with new data and findings and dramatic effects. The addition of a new spread and map devoted to Mars will provide a timely reference to the expected news coverage of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Mission-Spirit and Opportunity. Flags and facts of every country in the world have been newly designed and consolidated into one section, listed in alphabetical order. Locater maps and cross referencing to corresponding large-scale map plates are provided for every entity. Text for each independent country summarizes physical and cultural aspects, while facts reveal the status of population, religion, area, capital, language, literacy, life expectancy, GDP, and economy. A user-friendly, 136 page, comprehensive place-name index cross-references over 130,000 geographical sites and areas. An appendix presents valuable, convenient reference to time zones, metric conversions, foreign terms, abbreviations, airline distances, and temperature and rainfall statistics from all corners of the globe. Navigating throughout the atlas is made easy with enhanced cross-referencing, pointers, labels and an end sheet that includes a visual key with corresponding plate numbers to all the maps. Every map spread in the atlas will include interactive features and access to up-to-the-minute updates and information via the electronic National Geographic Map Machine. Streams of information are available to us on myriad topics and on many fronts. At the same time, there is a need-greater than ever-to better understand our global culture. The Eighth Edition helps bridges the gap with a collection of maps and information that is as engaging as it is informative.


Customer Reviews:   Read 21 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Dollar For Dollar The Best World Atlas   July 31, 2001
 313 out of 380 found this review helpful

The National Geographic Society (NGS) Atlas of the World is an "evolutionary" rather than a "revolutionary" publication. Besides updated boundaries, etc., compared to prior editions it makes much better use of shading to indicate topography and has more detailed city maps. I buy an atlas primarily for the maps, and it's the maps that make the NGS Atlas superior to all others.

The traditional NGS "look" sometimes seems dated compared to the flashier colors and trendy graphics employed by some other publishers. However, the more I study the maps, the more information I find in them. A few years ago I did a comparison of this NGS with the most recent edition of the much more expensive Times Atlas of the World for a professional geographer's meeting. I was amazed to find that many of the NGS maps of North America had more than twice as many place names and named physical features as the Times Atlas. I also found the NGS Atlas maps equal or superior to the Times' maps for parts of the Middle East and northeast Asia with which I'm familiar (frankly, I found the 10th Edition Times Atlas inferior to the prior edition in several regards; for example, the elevation colors are far less discernable and detailed city maps have been virtually eliminated). Despite contrary opinions by some other reviewers, I judge the National Geographic Atlas maps to be far and away superior in content and sheer volume of information presented to all the other "high end" atlases published by Oxford, Hammond and DK. In fact, I couldn't justify recommending any of the other atlases (except possibly the Times, which, I admit, does offer fantastic detail for village names in the rural plains of India where I hope to never visit) to a library.

The National Geographic Society Atlas of the World is a great investment for travel planning, tracking current events, studying geography and history or just reading maps for pleasure. I recommend it highly.



4 out of 5 stars A good way to explore the earth   April 11, 2000
 205 out of 269 found this review helpful

I have always enjoyed maps, atlases and geography, above and beyond the little I got in school. The National Geographic Atlas was the successor to my dated (and beat-up) 1985 copy of the Hammond Citation Atlas, which I spent long hours looking over in the days when there was still a Soviet Union. I am glad to have something so current that it even shows the splitting of the Canadian NWT to create the new territory of Nunavut in 1999. The satellite imagery is certainly a good summary of overall surface detail, something that no "physical" map will provide, but most of what there is to read is in the selection of principally political maps. National Geographic has taken the approach of presenting "chunks" of landmass roughly chosen to include certain countries, states or regions, and one often finds a given division shown on numerous maps at numerous scales--European countries, for example, might appear in their own maps, in maps of Europe, and at the edge of a map of Asia. In this regard, the cartographers do well to keep all the details at the peripheral areas that are shown for the ones the map is "supposed to" depict. This serves to create a continuity that draws one's attention from place to place, which is how the one earth really exists, after all. Most notably missing from this Atlas is topographic indications, though the shading of relief and numerous elevations allow a person to perceive the general lay of the land. Being American, I naturally have a bit of trouble with the use of metric measurements for altitudes and soundings, but after reading off enough peaks I was already familiar with, I formed a usable enough reference frame in my mind. One feature of the Hammond Citation that is missing from this otherwise more extensive atlas is the coupling of thematic and political maps. I had grown accustomed to having land use and mineral information in the context of the more detailed maps. The National Geographic Seventh Edition presents all of the thematic maps for the entire world in the opening section, making a person flip back and forth. Another difficulty I'm still adjusting to is the sheer size of this book. I find myself needing to stretch a fair distance beyond my typical range to get from a position at the bottom of the page to detail at the top. All in all, however, this Atlas contains a wealth of well-thought-out and consistently presented data on the entire earth. It is sure to be something I'll use for quite some time, as I continue to feed my appetite for facts, big and small, about our terrestrial home.


4 out of 5 stars Fantastic, but doesn't live up to all advertisements   October 21, 2004
 147 out of 193 found this review helpful

With a limited number of printings and a three-digit price, you expect great things from National Geographic's Altas of the World. And, for the most part, the book delivers. In lieu of a long review, I though I'd just come up with some pros and cons to explain why I gave the book the rating I did.

Pros: amazing quality of pictures/maps, city maps, intresting nation and political information, wealth of information, built-in bookmark.

Cons: not 400 pages like amazon claims (137 pages sans index), index is almost as long as rest of book, will not fit in any bookcase you own, poor binding for such an expensive book, hard to fit back in cover.

The last atlas I owned was a child's atlas from 1987. I bought the National Geographic version because I took it to be the diffinitive atlas. And it is. I'm happy with the 8th edition and I'm sure it will be a usefull reference for years to come. But given how few pages it is and how much money it cost, I'm not sure I would buy the 9th edition.



1 out of 5 stars dollar for dollar not the best atlas   September 2, 2001
 118 out of 160 found this review helpful

I found the quality, accuracy, and ease of this atlas underwhelming for the price. It's the most expensive atlas out there, but has nothing on Hammond, Oxford, or Goode's--all of which are half the price. Don't be fooled by the big marketing campaign. NG might be powerful, but it doesn't make the best atlases.


5 out of 5 stars Probably the easiest and most fun to look at and use.   March 1, 2000
 111 out of 146 found this review helpful

I also own what may be considered the definitive world atlas - that of The Times. The Times atlas has shaded colors for elevations and greater general detail than that of the National Geographic Atlas.

Still, for me, I find myself picking up the National Geographic Atlas way more often. Why? Simply put, it's just the most enjoyable to look at and easiest and most fun to use. I like it better.

A great work.




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