Used 1988 National Geographic Magazines for Sale
These magazines are for sale for $3.00 each (plus shipping,
taxes, etc., as explained below).
Supplemental (loose) maps are NOT
included because most are missing. However we do have a few maps. If a map is available for the issue of magazine that you buy, you can buy the map for an additional $0.25. Click for details.
The purchaser shall be responsible for costs of mailing, taxes, and customs
duties as applicable.
For important information regarding the procedures and rules about how we
sell our stuff, please see our Conditions of Sale.
If you are interesting in buying any of our stuff, or otherwise want to contact
us, please
contact us.
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If you want to sell magazines, please be aware that we only buy magazines under very limited conditions!
- NAG8803: Volume 173, Number 3 - March 1988
- China Passage by Rail
- Announcing a New National Geographic Society Foundation
- Exploring Our Lost Century
- Hello Anchorage, Good-Bye Dream
- The Falkland Islands—Life After the War
- Falkland Islands Wildlife
- NAG8804: Volume 173, Number 4 - April 1988
- Ghosts of War in the South Pacific
- Wreck of the Coolidge
- Uganda—Land Beyond Sorrow
- Texas in Bloom
- Wildflowers Across America
- Finding a Pharaoh's Funeral Bark
- Riddle of the Pyramid Boats
- NAG8806: Volume 173, Number 6 - June 1988
- The Eternal Etruscans
- Palio
- Ellesmere Island — Life in the High Arctic
- Guatemala: A Fragile Democracy
- Yorktown Shipwreck
- Coelacanths: The Fish That Time Forgot
- NAG8807: Volume 174, Number 1 - July 1988
- Atlanta on the Rise
- The Day the World Ended at Kourion
- Acts of Faith in Chile
- When the Moors Ruled Spain
- What’s Killing the Palm Trees?
- NAG8808: Volume 174, Number 2 - August 1988
- Madagascar’s Lemurs
- Annapolis: Camelot on the Bay
- Triumph of Daedalus
- Frederic Remington — The Man and the Myth
- The South Koreans
- Kyongju, Where Korea Began
- NAG8809: Volume 174, Number 3 - September 1988
Special 100th anniversary issue:
- Within the Yellow Border
The famous GEOGRAPHIC cover has mirrored the birth, growth, and universality of our Society’s journal, says Editor Wilbur E. Garrett. Foldout displays early covers and presents all 353 with illustrations, since the first in July 1942.
- Three Men Who Made the Magazine
In a look back at NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC’S first 100 years, Editor-at-Large Charles McCarry traces the special gifts of Alexander Graham Bell, Gilbert H. Grosvenor, and Melville Bell Grosvenor, three innovators whose creative ideas and talented staffs gave shpe to the journal.
- The Greatest Job in the World?
In lighthearted stream of consiousness, Senior Associate Editor Joseph Judge recalls private comments of our far-ranging writers and photographers.
- Odyssey: The Art of Photography
Geographic photographs as art are discussed by Jane Livingston, Associate Director and Chief Curator of the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. From past magazines and archives she and her staff selected pictures for an exhibit that will be seen in art museums around the world.
- Spoofing the Geographic
Through the years, American’s top cartoonists have poked good-natured fun at Geographic traditions. Humorist Roy Blount, Jr., gives his own views.
- Alexander Graham Bell
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Robert V. Bruce brings brings alive the Scottish-born tinkerer who became one of American’s most famous inventors and a beloved teacher of the deaf. Photographs by Ira Block.
- Did Peary Reach the Pole?
The claim of the gret Arctic explorer has been questioned for nearly 80 years. Drawing on all available sources including Peary’s now realeased diary, Wally Herbert — also a noted polar explorer — joins the debate.
- Descendants of the Expeditions
Recounting touching moments of reconciliation, Edward Peary Stafford, the explorer’s grandson, and Harvard Professor S. Allen Counter travel to Greenland to meet the Eskimo families of Robert E. Peary and his assistant Matthew A . Henson. photographs by Bob Sacha.
- New Atlas Unfurls Nation’s History
President Gilbert M. Grosvenor announces the publication of the Society’s unprecedented HISTORICAL ATLAS OF THE UNITED STATES and the donation of a copy to each of the nation’s 35,000 schools with a ninth grade or above.
- NAG8810: Volume 174, Number 4 - October 1988
- The Peopling of the Earth
- In Search of Modern Humans
- An Ice Age Ancestor?
- Treasures of Lascaux Cave
- Weapons Cache of Ancient Americans
- Air Bridge to Siberia
- Richest Unlooted Tomb of a Moche Lord
- The Afrikaners
- The Hmong in America
- NAG8811: Volume 174, Number 5 - November 1988
Supplemental map available for this issue for 25¢ more.
- Exploring Cradle Earth
- The Mighty Himalaya: A Fragile Heritage
- Heavy Hands on the Land
- Mapping Mount Everest
- Honey Hunters of Nepal
- Long Journey of the Brahmaputra
- Down the Cayman Wall
- Mission to Mars
- NAG8812: Volume 174, Number 6 - December 1988
- Will We Mend Our Earth?
- Rondônia: Brazil’s Imperiled Rain Forest
- Urueu-Wau-Wau Indians: Last Days of Eden
- Quietly Conserving Nature
- Caribou — Majestic Wanderers
- An Arctic Dilemma
- Whales: An Era of Discovery
- New Perspectives on the World
- Population, Plenty, and Pverty
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©2004 Robert M. Fleming Jr.
This page was last updated on 3 June 2010.