ϳԹ

Image

ϳԹ Magazine, Jan 2002

Stories

POSTs


A peek inside the dog-eat-dog world of archaeological sleuths, historic aircraft buffs, and serial entrepreneurs trying to solve the mystery of what happened to one of the greatest aviators of the 20th century

Published:  Updated: 

Want to explore the world and a higher calling? Volunteer.

Published:  Updated: 

Twelve trips to change your life—and make a difference

Published: 

A world-class mountain biking, surfing, and boardsailing hideout awaits in Baja. All you have to do is find it.

Published:  Updated: 

ϳԹ Essentials, To Go

Published:  Updated: 

Meet paleontology's wonder boys—the hard-shoveling, hard-drinking fossil hunters of the Bahariya Dinosaur Project

Published:  Updated: 

He is the undisputed king of an immensely grueling sport. So why must Reid Sabin shovel dirt just to get by?

Published:  Updated: 

IT WASN’T AS BIG as, say, finding a Lost Ark made of Jolly Ranchers, but the discovery last January of a vintage Hershey’s chocolate bar entombed in polar ice rocked the world of snack archaeology. Now, a year later, the company wants to know: How did the sweet get to…

Published:  Updated: 

Armed with audiovisual firepower, a squadron of bird geeks chases the one that got away

Published:  Updated: 

With his radical flying sailboat L'Hydroptère, a French skipper aims to snatch Steve Fossett's brand-new Atlantic speed record

Published:  Updated: 

An ardent defender of wilderness reflected on the solace of the mountains and nature in difficult times. He wrote this after 9/11, but the sentiment applies now, too, as we watch the world changing around us.

Published:  Updated: 

Going deep in Poland's Tatra Mountains, where the forests are soulful, the slopes steep, and the trails most holy

Published:  Updated: 

Warm, windswept, unfettered, ever-changing—North America's four great desert regions hide untold possibilities for classic winter adventure. They may be scorching and sere, with prickly dangers over every horizon, but if you know where to go—and how to explore wisely—you'll find these 500,000 square miles of desolation downright hospitable.

Stomp into winter with the year's most versatile snowshoes

Published:  Updated: 

Forget what you've heard about calories, pounds, carbs, or miles—the adventure athlete's real secret to optimal weight is all about energy management

Published:  Updated: 

The Intrepid Travels and Incredible Tales of Col. John Blashford-Snell, Explorer

Published:  Updated: 

F E A T U R E S

THE GREAT AMERICAN DESERT

Ed Abbey and John the Baptist were both hip to the same truth: Deserts are the place to go when you’re ready for a wild detour off the beaten path. Whether you’re into camping, hiking, biking, kayaking, or canyoneering, we’ve got the how-to essentials in our packed guide to the 16 best trips in 500,000 glorious square miles of North American desert.

An introduction by Craig Childs

Ride fine singletrack in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. By Jonathan Hanson Plus: Backpacking in the Superstition Mountains; sea kayaking off Isla del Tiburón.

a Climb and hike the slot canyons of Escalante National Monument. By Rob Story Plus: Exploring Paria Canyon; llama trekking in the San Rafael Swell.

Surrender to coyote serenades in Joshua Tree. By Robert Earl Howells Plus: Backpacking the Inyo Mountains Wilderness; climbing Red Rock Canyon.

Take spring break on the Mexican side of Big Bend. By Peter Heller Plus: Hiking the Guadalupe Mountains; frolicking in White Sands National Monument.

Also: Other great trips, , , the , and much more.


Ever since the famous pilot vanished in 1937, aviation buffs, treasure hunters, and conspiracy theorists have clamored to find out what really happened. The latest crop of Amelia-heads think they’ve got the answer—and they’re racing to cash in on flying’s favorite unsolved mystery. By Stephen Titus


In a world turned upside down after September 11, a timely meditation on the joys (and limitations) of heading for the hills. By Jack Turner


Between outrageous expeditions, Great Britain’s most eclectic old-school explorer tells all. By Marshall Sella

D E P A R T M E N T S


How low can they go? Armed with cartons of cigarettes and sticks of dynamite, an plans to blast its own spelunking world record.
Reid Sabin is the world’s . Why haven’t you heard of him?
Dig this: Grad students unearth the world’s second-largest
A French hydrofoil boat threatens Plus: Mushing hits the silver screen in ; a 64-year-old feeds an Antarctic mystery; ; and huckers score their own toy .


How do you name a mountain? Why don’t we get thunderstorms in the winter? When you throw chum into the ocean, how quickly does its scent travel to sharks? How much horsepower can a human generate? By Brad Wetzler


Once upon a time, Pope John Paul II played hooky to grab powder turns in the Tatra Mountains. Now, carving His Holiness’s home slopes, the writer finds that Poland remains a heavenly place to ski. By Lisa Anne Auerbach


Travel the globe as an aid worker, advises ; it will change your life and many others. We scoured the planet to find 12 of the world’s most —from building a medical clinic in Kenya to monitoring seabirds in the North Pacific.
With 30 miles of freshly crafted singletrack, the remote paradise of Punta San Carlos is now a multisport triple threat.
Plus: World-class climbing crags emerge in Cuba; skier Scot Schmidt’s travel company turns ; and .


Did holiday bingeing slap you with a five-pound fine? No problem. We’ve collected for revving up your metabolism, breaking bad habits, and restoring your form.
A fitness guru shares a total-body plan that .


Whether you want to scale an icy couloir, enter a winter 5k, or trek through four feet of fresh powder, the will get you there and back in style.
Strap-on or step-in: Four no-fuss snowboard .


The Birds of Heaven, by Peter Matthiessen; Edward Abbey, by James M. Cahalan; ϳԹs with Ed, by Jack Loeffler; The Last Cowboys at the End of the World, by Nick Reding; and Loaded, by Robert Sabbag.