NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE - JULY 1990 - VOLUME 178, VOLUME 1  





Cover: Flamboyant plumes called aigrettes mark the breeding phase of the great egret, a year-round resident of south Florida wetlands. Depleted by plume hunters at the turn of the century and now protected, this heron has regained its former numbers. Photograph by Farrell Grehan.



Production Information: 


- Florida Watershed - South Florida Water: Paying the Price -Once shunned as mosquito-infested swampland, the watery wilderness of south Florida has been drained, dredged, and diked for farms and cities. But these spectacular feats of engineering have wreaked havoc on the environment, according to Nicole Duplaix. Photographs by Kevin Fleming,

- The Timeless Mystique of Emeralds - Emeralds - Coveted by kings and commoners alike for thousands of years, these green gems are still wrested from the earth, cut, and polished mostly by hand. And some are still transported the old- fashioned way – by smuggling, says author-photographer Fred Ward, who tracks their journeys around the world.

- The Coral Reefs of Florida Are Imperiled - Florida’s Coral Reefs Are Imperiled - Formed by tiny marine organisms called polyps, coral reefs take centuries to grow – and only years to decay. Water pollution and damage by careless boaters and divers threaten their survival. For three decades, author- photographer Fred Ward and photographer Jerry Greenberg have witnessed the deterioration of the reefs along the Florida Keys.

- Hawaii’s Volcanic Cradle of Life - High on the slopes of volcanoes that gave birth to these islands, ferns sprout in lava cracks and spiders spin webs in the molds of incinerated trees – models of adaptation. Biologist William H. Amos shows how a handful of microscopic life-forms arriving by chance from distant lands have exploded into diversity of species found nowhere else.

- Long Journey of the Pacific Salmon - Returning to their riverine birthplaces to spawn and die, Pacific salmon face dangers beyond hungry eagles and Indian nets. Commercial fleets, multiple dams, and the effects of clear- cut logging take an increasing toll. Jere Van Dyk and photographer Natalie Fobes study the prospects for seven prized species.



Condition: Nice clean magazine with some light wear. 
 


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