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With next year's Winter Olympics in Norway, the stakes for the tourist ^ industry are higher than ever. Another whaling nation, Iceland, has already quit the IWC but has not yet resumed the hunt for fear of the reaction from environmentally oriented tourists. This suggests that the real power to control whaling lies less in the IWC than in the pocketbooks and votes of consumers around the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sharpening The Harpoons | 5/24/1993 | See Source »

Several factors made the Age of Exploration possible. Medieval cartographers piously placed Jerusalem at the center of the earth. But in the 15th century, Western scholars rediscovered Ptolemy's Geography, with its maps of a semispheric earth that (more or less) accurately located such distant places as Iceland and Ceylon. Improvements in rigging enabled the construction of larger, more maneuverable ships with both square-rigged and fore-and-aft sails. The development of the quadrant (an Arabic invention) and magnetic compass (possibly from China) made navigation more accurate; the stern- fastened rudder made ship handling easier...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Millennium of Discovery | 10/15/1992 | See Source »

Frustrated by the International Whaling Commission's reluctance to lift a six- year-old ban on hunting minke whales they say have since become sufficiently plentiful, Iceland has quit the IWC and Norway is defiant. Environmentalists fear that could lead to hunting other, more endangered whales...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Watch Out, Whales! | 7/13/1992 | See Source »

...Iceland, Norway and Japan--the world's threeprincipal whaling nations--now say new scientificevidence proves that certain whale populations arenot in danger of extinction, and would be unharmedby regulated commercial whaling, Clapham said...

Author: By Joanna M. Weiss, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Norway to Resume Hunting of Whales | 6/30/1992 | See Source »

...navigation. At first he wanted to succeed through trade. Sea trade was the lifeblood of Genova la superba, proud Genoa. As a merchant navigator, Columbus sailed all over the Mediterranean, to the Guinea coast of Africa and as far north as Ireland. He may have gone as far as Iceland too. Sometime between 1478 and 1484, the full plan of self- aggrandizement and discovery took shape in his mind. He would win glory, riches and a title of nobility by opening a trade route to the untapped wealth of the Orient. No reward could be too great...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Just Who Was That Man? | 10/7/1991 | See Source »

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