Cover Image: How to Read the Landscape

How to Read the Landscape

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Member Reviews

For geography lovers, landscapers and science students, this is a one pack wonder. My knowledge of various terrains has expanded beyond my imagination. This is no light reading book but there are elements in here that sooth the process for skimmers.

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I received an e-copy of this book courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley.

How to Read the Landscape provides the reader with everything they need to know in order to-- well, read the landscape around them. It explains a variety of geological processes that have shaped the way landscapes look around the world, both in more mountainous regions and in the lowlands. It then goes from theoretical (although very well illustrated) explanations to showcasing particular examples of landscapes that are the results of all those processes. Sometimes it feels a little like a throwback to high school (or whenever it was you last had geography lessons), and indeed, I remember many of these pieces of information from school, but a revision was more than welcome.

While the most obvious use of the book would be to take it with you when you are travelling, I think it can also be very useful to all us writers around, especially when we are inventing our own worlds and we need to describe their geological origins. Why is there an archipelago in your world? Could the mountains even be where you have placed them? What would that river do to the landscape? Well, you can now take a look through How to Read the Landscape and figure it out for yourself.

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Reading landscapes is an extremely useful and interesting book, and helps you recognise features such as a 'Waterfall' from a 'Hanging Valley'.

This book is split into 3 parts: Understanding the Landscape, Reading the Landscape and Mapping the Landscape. Further to this, each part is then split down futher.

Part 1: Understanding the Landscape covers the earth structure and the processes that shape the earth such as volcanos and rock deformation.

Part 2: Reading the Landscape moves onto interpreting what you see be it lowland, upland, coastal or other features. Lowlands covers the hills and valleys, which include features such as mudflats and wetlands. Uplands explains the mountains and the different ways the are formed and the types. Coasts explains how our shores are created, along with features such as cliffs and arches.

Part 3: Mapping the Landscape begins by showing historical maps from 3200BCE up to modern day satellite maps. It briefly explains the differences between political, topography, geological and photographic maps before moving into more detail for the topography and geographical maps. Once you understand this and the features on a map such as footpaths and its time to head out with your local map, a compass or in the modern day, the GPS, though this navigation section only covers a few pages.

There is colour photography throughout and the features are explained also using colour drawings to further help you identify the world around you.

Overall it looks and feels like a geography study book that may suit someone doing a GCSE or A level as a quick study guide but I still found it very interesting to browse through.

I received this book from netgalley in return for a honest review.

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Have you ever been driving along, looking at the landscape, and wonder "why is it shaped like that"? I know that I have, especially out here in the western United States. Here the ground rises and falls, leaving twisted layers of rock that look like giants must have been playing with Play-Doh to make such strange landforms.
This short little handbook explains how it happened. Faults, volcanoes, ice fields, erosion, he explains it all. And in a very simply understood manner. The great photos and diagrams really help, also.
This would be a great book to read before you take a road trip. You will be able to understand so much more of what you are seeing. And it's written in such an easy way that even a middle school child could get a lot out of it!

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This is a general guide to landscapes in terms of geology and geography. In the first part, each page shows a different land form, for example a glacial valley or a freshwater wetland, and explains a bit about the origin of the landform and its appearance. Each page has illustrations and photos, some have aerial photos. The second part of the book, which is brief, is about maps, mapping, and GPS. The book provides a general overview of landscapes which would be a good introduction for a kid or a reference for your bookshelf. I would think it would be more helpful if it had consistently shown USGS topo maps and/or aerial photos for every category, for the purpose of finding these things in Google Earth and investigating them, but I'm biased in that direction. (I spend all day looking at aerial photos and maps for work.) It's a handy little guide and would complement more specific, local geography guide for young kids or people with a light interest in geography. It's easier to read than a textbook and easy to flip through to find what you are looking for.

My thanks to Netgalley and the Quarto Publishing Group- Ivy Press for providing an e-book free of charge. My opinions are my own.

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This is the book I wish I'd had in my introductory geology class. The drawings are so helpful in illustrating aspects of the geology that are foundational. The book is a basic overview and for my purposes I love it as reference material because it is incredibly approachable for an amateur such as myself.

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As an environmental science major, I was intrigued to see what this book had to offer, and let me say, it is very informative. It reads like a textbook, which I do not mind considering my schooling, but it is way more interesting then your standard textbook. The images that go along with the information really helps you grasp the material, and it has actually taught me a few things I did not know about.

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A fantastic overview of the different types of landforms and how they came to be. What really stood out to me were the photos and the graphics that really brought things together. The explanations themselves were easy to understand, but the visuals helped bring it home. This would have been a great resource to have when I was taking Earth Science back in high school.

The glossary in the back as well as the brief orienteering bits were good as well.

I would highly recommend this book to people interested in basic geology and just in general.

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#HowToReadTheLandscape #NetGalley

This is a complete reference book about the geological composition of different landscapes from sinkholes to mountains. This book can be added to any library for students in geology or in civil engineering.

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Interesting information for anyone interested in nature. It is well researched and formatted with fantastic illustrations. I like this as a book perfect when hiking to help inspire me to look more deeply in the area that surrounds me as well as appreciate it even more.

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I was expecting a book that was more geared toward the modern homesteader, but this was written more like a textbook. Nevertheless, the information is solid, the illustrations / pictures are helpful, and I think I will adapt this for use in a geology course for the students.

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April 2018
Nonfiction, nature, geology
Ivy Press

I received this digital ARC in exchange for an unbiased review from publisher and NetGalley.

A beautifully illustrated book about magnificent landscapes. The author dissects the awesome view of landscape as whole to bring attention to intricacies which make the view possible.

He begins with an explanation of the Earth’s formation and structure providing a reference point as he continues with the more complex aspects of the landscape. This book is suitable for those interested in landscapes in respect to its geological structure. The title might be a bit misleading for those who may be seeking a gardening landscape perspective.

I found the illustrations and explanations easy to understand providing a fascinating reminder of the beauty of the world around us.

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