Into the Unknown: High Adventure and Hard Lessons Exploring the World's Great, Lost Wilderness Rivers
Veteran wilderness guide Michael P. Ghiglieri takes you into the unknown—among white-water rapids, crocodiles, hippos, gorillas, lions, and impossible waterfalls. His riveting memoir not only serves up true high adventure, it also presents the ecology, natural history, conservation (or the lack of it), and exploration history of nine far-flung wilderness regions across the globe—including the never-to-be-repeated white-water run on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon during the Bureau of Reclamation’s 1983 super flood of ninety-seven thousand cubic feet per second; the first summit-to-sea descent of the Alas River exploring Sumatra’s new Gunung Leuser National Park, a last redoubt for wild orangutans and other rare species; and the “impossible” run of the Alsek River from the Yukon to Alaska in the world’s largest international conservation area.

Into the Unknown reveals what the natural world looks like through a professional’s eyes during “adventure” travel, when things start sliding toward the edge. This insider memoir recounts ten sagas of extreme expeditions into Earth’s most amazing wilderness regions to illustrate their realities, science, allure, history, risks to life and limb, and ultimate fates. Many of these regions have now vanished to “progress.” Others are imperiled. Only a few are protected. But all are, or were, places where exotic beauty and danger are inseparable.

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Into the Unknown: High Adventure and Hard Lessons Exploring the World's Great, Lost Wilderness Rivers
Veteran wilderness guide Michael P. Ghiglieri takes you into the unknown—among white-water rapids, crocodiles, hippos, gorillas, lions, and impossible waterfalls. His riveting memoir not only serves up true high adventure, it also presents the ecology, natural history, conservation (or the lack of it), and exploration history of nine far-flung wilderness regions across the globe—including the never-to-be-repeated white-water run on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon during the Bureau of Reclamation’s 1983 super flood of ninety-seven thousand cubic feet per second; the first summit-to-sea descent of the Alas River exploring Sumatra’s new Gunung Leuser National Park, a last redoubt for wild orangutans and other rare species; and the “impossible” run of the Alsek River from the Yukon to Alaska in the world’s largest international conservation area.

Into the Unknown reveals what the natural world looks like through a professional’s eyes during “adventure” travel, when things start sliding toward the edge. This insider memoir recounts ten sagas of extreme expeditions into Earth’s most amazing wilderness regions to illustrate their realities, science, allure, history, risks to life and limb, and ultimate fates. Many of these regions have now vanished to “progress.” Others are imperiled. Only a few are protected. But all are, or were, places where exotic beauty and danger are inseparable.

24.95 In Stock
Into the Unknown: High Adventure and Hard Lessons Exploring the World's Great, Lost Wilderness Rivers

Into the Unknown: High Adventure and Hard Lessons Exploring the World's Great, Lost Wilderness Rivers

by Michael P. Ghiglieri
Into the Unknown: High Adventure and Hard Lessons Exploring the World's Great, Lost Wilderness Rivers

Into the Unknown: High Adventure and Hard Lessons Exploring the World's Great, Lost Wilderness Rivers

by Michael P. Ghiglieri

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Overview

Veteran wilderness guide Michael P. Ghiglieri takes you into the unknown—among white-water rapids, crocodiles, hippos, gorillas, lions, and impossible waterfalls. His riveting memoir not only serves up true high adventure, it also presents the ecology, natural history, conservation (or the lack of it), and exploration history of nine far-flung wilderness regions across the globe—including the never-to-be-repeated white-water run on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon during the Bureau of Reclamation’s 1983 super flood of ninety-seven thousand cubic feet per second; the first summit-to-sea descent of the Alas River exploring Sumatra’s new Gunung Leuser National Park, a last redoubt for wild orangutans and other rare species; and the “impossible” run of the Alsek River from the Yukon to Alaska in the world’s largest international conservation area.

Into the Unknown reveals what the natural world looks like through a professional’s eyes during “adventure” travel, when things start sliding toward the edge. This insider memoir recounts ten sagas of extreme expeditions into Earth’s most amazing wilderness regions to illustrate their realities, science, allure, history, risks to life and limb, and ultimate fates. Many of these regions have now vanished to “progress.” Others are imperiled. Only a few are protected. But all are, or were, places where exotic beauty and danger are inseparable.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826366849
Publisher: University of New Mexico Press
Publication date: 09/15/2024
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Michael P. Ghiglieri has worked as a professional wilderness river guide for fifty years on forty rivers around the world. His books include Canyon and, with Thomas M. Myers, Over the Edge: Death in Grand Canyon, winner of the National Outdoor Book Award.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Preface. What Could These Guides Be Thinking?

Chapter 1. The Stanislaus: Paradise Lost
Chapter 2. Kidnapped (and Derailed)
Chapter 3. Mission Impossible: The Vanishing Euphrates
Chapter 4. Kilombero-Rufiji: East Africa’s Biggest
Chapter 5. Gorilla Country
Chapter 6. The Omo: Back to the Stone Age
Chapter 7. 1983: High Water in the Great Unknown
Chapter 8. Over the Edge in New Guinea
Chapter 9. “Stardom” on the Alas, Sumatra
Chapter 10. Alsek: Ice Age Jackpot
Chapter 11. The Most Overpriced Oarboat
The Upshot

Index
About the Author

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