This publication includes a series of portraits and landscapes by John Hartman, featuring accomplished mountaineers Don Gardner, Neil Liske, Chic Scott, and Charlie Locke, during their 21 day epic Great Divide Ski Traverse from Jasper to West Louise Lodge in 1967.
Notes
Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies on display April 8 until June 11, 2017
Essay -- A walk across the top of the world in winter / Ian Brown
This publication includes a series of portraits and landscapes by John Hartman, featuring accomplished mountaineers Don Gardner, Neil Liske, Chic Scott, and Charlie Locke, during their 21 day epic Great Divide Ski Traverse from Jasper to West Louise Lodge in 1967.
Notes
Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies on display April 8 until June 11, 2017
Essay -- A walk across the top of the world in winter / Ian Brown
Contents: Portrait for Lucinda (p.2); Recollection in June (p.3); Vision for Nigel (p.4); Memoir for Denise (p.5); Tableau for Erin (p.6); Toward the adoration of reality (p.7); Memoir for Laetitia (p.8)
Cover: photograph of (left to right) Bill Ward, Annie Ward, and Kay Ward (the author’s mother) on the summit ridge of Sulphur Mountain about 1920; weather station in background; object above weather station is dirt on photo
Advanced Rock Climbing: Expert Skills and Technique is for good climbers who want to get even better, from training to gear, sport climbing to multi-pitch efficiency, and beyond. Each chapter has detailed advice from some of the world's best climbers and guides, Tommy Caldwell, Angela Hawse, Justen Sjong, Steph Davis, Sonny Trotter, Alex Honnold, Lynn Hill, and more. (from WorldCat).
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and
potentially offensive content.
Read more.
The airman's Arctic survival guide : diagrams and lectures prepared for the U.S. Army Air Corps, The Lovat Scouts, and all travellers of the North - 1942 to
1952
The third volume in the First Nations Language Readers series--meant for language learners and language users--this collection presents eight Blackfoot stories told by Lena Russell, a fluent speaker of Blackfoot from the Kainai (Blood) reserve in southern Alberta. In contract with other Algonquian languages, such as Cree and Saulteaux (Ojibwe), Blackfoot is not usually written in syllabics, so these stories are presented in the Blackfoot language using the Roman alphabet, together with the English translation. The spelling system is based on the conventions of the International Phonetic Alphabet, and should be transparent for native speakers of Blackfoot as well as for linguists. The Reader includes a Blackfoot-to-English glossary containing all the nouns, verbs, adjuncts, etc. , found in the texts, as well as stress or pitch accents over the vowel or vowels which bear the accent. (from University of Regina Press website)
Contents
1. Omohto´'totama'piihpi aahkssawa´ tsto'si Niitsi´'powahsini Why the Blackfoot language is important to preserve -- 2. Aatsi´moi'hkaani Prayer -- 3. Ni´nna Aka´o´hkitopiiwa #1 My Father, Rides-Many-Horses #1 -- 4. Ni´nna Aka´o´hkitopiiwa #2 My Father, Rides-Many-Horses #2 -- 5. Ami´i´ ohki´ni ki ama´a´ya na´i´i´pisstsiitapiima A finger bone and a rag doll -- 6. Ksi´ssta'pssiwa A Spirit -- 7. Isstoyi´i´si Cold Weather -- 8. O´mahksisttsi´i´ksiinaiksi Rattlesnakes -- Blackfoot -- English Glossary.