Alejandro Selkirk Island

Results: 4



#Item
1Alexander Selkirk / Alejandro Selkirk Island / San Juan Bautista /  Chile / Robinson Crusoe / Santa Clara Island / Water / Americas / Juan Fernández Firecrown / Chile / Juan Fernández Islands / Castaways / Robinson Crusoe Island

Nine of Cups – Liberty 458 Cutter – 7’ draft Subject Area: Islas Juan Fernandez The volcanic Islas Juan Fernandez are a group of three islands (Robinson Crusoe, Santa Clara and Alejandro Selkirk) and a spattering o

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Source URL: www.nineofcups.com

Language: English - Date: 2014-08-03 12:22:09
2Alexander Selkirk / Alejandro Selkirk Island / San Juan Bautista /  Chile / Robinson Crusoe / Santa Clara Island / Water / Americas / Juan Fernández Firecrown / Chile / Juan Fernández Islands / Castaways / Robinson Crusoe Island

Nine of Cups – Liberty 458 Cutter – 7’ draft Subject Area: Islas Juan Fernandez The volcanic Islas Juan Fernandez are a group of three islands (Robinson Crusoe, Santa Clara and Alejandro Selkirk) and a spattering o

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Source URL: nineofcups.com

Language: English - Date: 2014-08-03 12:22:09
3Environment / Biogeography / Forests / Tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests / Robinson Crusoe Island / Alejandro Selkirk Island / Myrceugenia / Invasive species / Cloud forest / Systems ecology / Juan Fernández Islands / Habitats

Robinson Crusoe’s Legacy An Environmental History of the Juan Fernández Archipélago The Juan Fernández Archipélago is located approximately[removed]km west of Santiago, Chile, and was discovered in 1574 by the Span

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Source URL: palaeoworks.anu.edu.au

Language: English - Date: 2005-04-07 21:26:34
4Robinson Crusoe Island / Alejandro Selkirk Island / Juan Fernández Firecrown / Santa Clara Island / Firecrown / Alexander Selkirk / Santalum fernandezianum / San Juan Bautista /  Chile / Gunnera / Juan Fernández Islands / Geography of Chile / Geography

JUAN FERNANDEZ ISLANDS to be almost perpetually cloud covered, which along with occasional frosts and snow falls, contribute to the existence of a climatic forest limit at an elevation of around – m.

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Source URL: palaeoworks.anu.edu.au

Language: English - Date: 2009-07-30 19:46:46
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