Surplus 1998 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 send an e-mail to
surplus@eskimo.com.
For shipping options, please see Shipping Options.
For payment options, please see Payment Options.
If you want to sell magazines, please be aware that we only buy magazines under very limited cconditions!
- NAG9801: Volume 193, Number 1 - January 1998
- Making Sense of the Millennium
As the year 2000 approaches and global mania builds, we step back to
consider six areas critical to future generations in this introduction
to a two-year series.
- Blackpool, England
Braving chill waters and rambunctious crowds, Britons for decades have
enjoyed the gaudy pleasures of this improbable seaside resort.
- Polar Bears
Scientists follow the sea bear into the Arctic vastness, puzzling out how it
hunts, breeds — and keeps from freezing to death.
- The Easy Ways of the Altamaha
Gnarled cypresses dot the marshes where herons stalk and gators laze and
Georgians savor the tranquillity of their timeless river.
- Labors of Love
The National Geographic Society’s Committee for Research and Exploration included Maya villagers
among more than 200 grantees funded in 1997.
- Ode to Ice
When a hard freeze transforms the Dutch landscape, canals sing with the
music of skates.
- Amelia Earhart
The world’s most famous aviatrix vanished over the Pacific in 1937.
Amelia Earhart’s untimely death helped assure that her pioneering
achievements in the cockpit would not be forgotten.
- NAG9802: Volume 193, Number 2 - February 1998
Supplemental map available for this issue for 25¢ more.
- EXPLORATION: Where Do We Go Next?
- Revolutions in Mapping
- Why Explore?
- Queen Maud Land
- Jacques-Yves Cousteau
- Brides of the Sahara
- Remember the Maine?
- Australia by Bike, Part Two
- NAG9803: Volume 193, Number 3 - March 1998
- Blue Refuges
- Naples Unabashed
- The Rise of Life on Earth
- America’s First Highway
- Planet of the Beetles
- Nenets: Surviving on the Siberian Tundra
- NAG9804: Volume 193, Number 4 - April 1998
- The Orinoco
- Roman Shipwrecks
- Australia by Bike, Part Three
- Testing the Waters of Rongelap
- Ozarks Harmony
- Life Grows Up
- The Vanishing Prairie Dog
- NAG9805: Volume 193, Number 5 - May 1998
Supplemental map available for this issue for 25¢ more.
- Physical World: How Will the Planet Change?
- Cascadia
- Unlocking the Climate Puzzle
- Return of the Gray Wolf
- Prince Edward Island
- The Whitbread — Race Into Danger
- NAG9806: Volume 193, Number 6 - June 1998
- Russia’s Iron Road
Stretching 5,770 miles from Moscow to Vladivostok, the Trans-Siberian Railroad, the world^rsquo;s longest, links a land still adjusting to the end of the Soviet era.
- The Elusive Quetzal
The iridescent bird revered by ancient Mesoamericans has become a rare sight as its habitat falls to human enroachment.
- Orkney: Ancient North Sea Haven
Verdant gems on a violent sea, these Scottish isles reflect pride in a Viking past.
- Fast Times in Stock Car Country
From small-town dirt tracks to sleek NASCAR raceways like Daytona, stock car racing has accelerated into America’s fastest growing spectator sport.
- Golden Harvest of the Raji
Honey hunters in southern Nepal trace floral trails to lofty hives. But life almong the Raji is no stroll down a garden path.
- Deep Mysteries of Kaikoura Canyon
Does the legendary giant squid lurk in this mile-deep ravine off New Zealand? Sperm whales bearing scars of huge thrashing tentacles suggest so.
- Adirnodack High
New York State’s blue-water lakes and fir-clad mountains promise peace of mind — despite periodic spats between conservationists and eger developers.
- NAG9807: Volume 194, Number 1 - July 1998
Supplemental map available for this issue for 25¢ more.
- Living With Natural Hazards
Ice storms, tornadoes, floods, wildfires — all exact a high price, yet more and more people are living where such disasters are most likely to strike.
- Lure of the Frogfish
Thiving in warm water around the globe, the frogfish can change color, walk on its fins, and attract prey with wormlike &ldaquo;bait” that dangles from a spine on its head.
- Civilized Denmark
A clean and prosperous land with virtually no crime or poverty, the smallest country in Scandinavia is, according to an American humorist, “the World’s Most Nearly Perfect Nation” — except in winter.
- Dinosaurs Take Wing
New fossil discoveries from CHina reveal astonishing feathered creatures that lived more than 120 millions years ago and appear to donfirm what scientists have long theorized: Birds are dinosaurs.
- The Untamed Yukon River
A century ago tens of thousands of prospectors rafted its length dreaming of gold. Today North America’s fifth largest river yields a mother lode of empty space to dreamers with an itch for challenge and elbowroom.
- New Inca Mummies
High in the Peruvian Andes archaelogists have uncovered the remains of four more human sacrifices, adding new insights into the complex spiritual life of an ancient people.
- NAG9808: Volume 194, Number 2 - August 1998
- Return to Mars
- Orangutans in the Wild
- New York’s Chinatown
- Bottlenose Whales
- The Dawn of Humans
- Indonesia’s Plague of Fire
- Titanic: Tragedy in Three Dimensions
- NAG9809: Volume 194, Number 3 - September 1998
- Valley of the Kings
- A New Day for Romania
- Greenland Sharks
- Vermont: Suite of Seasons
- Catherine the Great
- Borneo’s White Mountain
- NAG9810: Volume 194, Number 4 - October 1998
Supplemental map available for this issue for 25¢ more.
- POPULATION
- Human Migration
- Women and Population
- Feeding the Planet
- Lewis and Clark
- Perfume, the Essence of Illusion
- Antarctic Desert
- NAG9811: Volume 194, Number 5 - November 1998
- America’s Wilderness
Early settlers saw the continent’s forested wildlands as a fearful challenge. Today people seek nature to recharge their urbanized souls. Nearly 5 percent of U.S. land has been designated wilderness, but how it is used and managed is far from settled.
- A Comeback for the Cossacks
Armed with memories of bygone glory, a centuries-old warrior caste crusades for order and discipline in tumultuous modern Russia.
- Maui Surf
A dozen times a year Pacific storms and the underwater topography of Maui’s north shore combine to create monster waves called Jaws. Only a handful of surfers even try to ride the Hawaiian behemoths.
- Red Colobus Monkeys
Deforewtation and a low reproductive rate could spell the end for tree-dwelling monkeys on the increasingly crowded East African island of Zanzibar.
- Shackleton Expedition
After pack ice trapped their ship, explorer Ernest Shackleton and his men abandoned their dream of crossing Antarctica on foot and began a 20-month struggle to survive.
- Abusir Tomb
The crypt of an Egyptian priest, hidden deep below the sands and undisturbed for 2,000 years, promises to yeld knowledge as valuable as a pharaoh’s treasure.
- Nebraska
Street gangs have sprung up in Omaha, but heartland values hold firm in a land where neighbors are quick to lend a hand.
- NAG9812: Volume 194, Number 6 - December 1998
Supplemental map available for this issue for 25¢ more.
- South China Sea
- Dinosaur Embryos
- Barcelona
- Nunataks
- Winslow Homer
- Body Beasts
- Petra, Ancient City of Stone
There are other National Geographic magazines for sale at:
(up through 1990)
the Fleming Family National Geographic site and
(1991 and on)
The Fleming Company's
National Geographic site.
There are also other magazines for sale at
The Fleming Company's
magazines-for-sale site. and at
the Fleming Family magazine site.
Return to main National Geographic page
Return to List of Stuff to Sell
Return to The Flemco Surplus Sales home page
©2004 Robert M. Fleming Jr.
This page last updated 1 March 2007.
Our internet service provider and web host is
