Showing 1–12 of 31 resultsSorted by average rating

National Geographic

About Product
This issue covered tales of the Pacific Ocean and New Zealand. Each copy was supplemented with one of NAT GEO’s famous maps, which details the Pacific Region vividly. The cover image was created by the legendary photographer and explorer Luis Marden, one of the most prolific editors-in-chief the magazine ever had.

National Geographic

About Product
Covered in this issue, was the maiden voyage of the world’s first nuclear-powered merchant ship, Savannah. Each copy was supplemented with a detailed atlas plate of the Washington-Boston region in the USA, drawn by the in-house cartography division.

National Geographic

About Product
The year is 1962 and America has just launched a man into space. The issue covered the trajectory of Mercury-Atlas 6, the first American orbital spaceflight, piloted by astronaut John Glenn. It also carries the first advertisement of a warning issued by the Wall Street Journal regarding the Flash Crash of 1962—the first market crash after the Great Depression (1929).

National Geographic

About Product
This issue was the first all-colour print magazine published in the U. S. It was edited by Melville Bell Grosvenor, who was Alexander Graham Bell’s grandson. Cover shot by Jerry Greenberg.

National Geographic

About Product
This issue has an article by Otis Imoden, one of NAT GEO’s top photographers and also a correspondent for NASA. Exposition of Tahiti as the new paradise (island) on Earth also included.

National Geographic

About Product : A recap of John Glenn’s orbital trips, coverage of him receiving the Hubbard Medal. Photographs captured by him of space were included in this issue (cover shot). Discovery of Ice Age mementos in Wyoming, USA also covered.

National Geographic

About Product
The issue has an article which discusses the life and times of the English explorer Henry Hudson, who is known to have been the first European to explore what is now known as the Hudson River, in New York, USA. The river was later named after him. Also covered in this issue, is the initiation of the newly independent Mongolia, in the United Nations.

National Geographic

About Product
A commentary on the onset of the era of satellite communication and how they may reform global correspondence.

National Geographic

About Product
Pictured in the cover, burning homes in the village of Vihn Quoi along the Saigon, in the middle of the Vietnam War. The issue was supplemented by a map  of the new republics in southern Africa.

National Geographic

About Product
Supplemented with the issue was a pictorial map of Los Angeles, Colossus of the West, designed from a birds-eye view, featuring vibrant colours, and exaggerated icons depicting local landmarks— to go with the 50-page cover story. It also included an article by Sir Edmund Hillary.

National Geographic

About Product
Comes with a map of the Eastern part of South America,  features inset maps of the cities of Brasilia, Rio de Janeiro, and Sao Paulo; compliments the cover story—“Brazil, Oba!”