PART 1 GENERAL INFORMATION
Chapter 1 Background Information
Geography, Climate, History, Natural history and conservation
Chapter 2 Practical Information
When to visit, Tour operators and independent travel, Possible
activities, Travel for non-tourists, Red tape, Getting there and
away, Health, Safety, Travelling with a disabilities, What to
take
PART 2 SVALBARD
Chapter 3 Svalbard's Regions
(Vest) Spitsbergen, Nordaustlandet, Edgeøya and Tusenøyane,
Barentsøya, Kvitøya, Prins Karls Forland, Kong Karls Land, Bjørnøya
(Bear Island), Hopen
Chapter 4 Cruising
Traditional cruises, Expedition cruises, The cruising season, Life
on board, Clothing, Cruise routes
Chapter 5 In Svalbard
Getting around, Tourist information, Money and banking,
Accommodation, Eating and drinking, Shopping, Photography and
video, Media and communications, Sport
Chapter 6 Svalbard's Settlements and Stations
Longyearbyen, Barentsburg, Sveagruva, Pyramiden, Ny-Alesund,
Hornsund, Norwegian stations, Trapper stations, Drilling
stations
PART 3 FRANZ JOSEF LAND
Chapter 7 Franz Josef Land
Geology and geography, Climate, Wildlife and conservation, History,
Practical information, The islands
PART 4 JAN MAYEN
Chapter 8 Jan Mayen
Geology and geography, Climate, Wildlife and conservation, History,
Practical information
Appendices
Glossary/Other
Further info
Index
Roger Norum is a social anthropologist and travel journalist with
extensive experience studying, working and travelling in Northern
Norway. He has authored several guides to Norway and regularly
writes about Norway for publications such as The Telegraph. Roger
currently teaches Norwegian language and translation at University
College London, and holds a post as Research Fellow at the
University of Leeds, where he carries out research on the links
between tourism, travel writing and environmental change in the
European Arctic on an EU-funded project, Arctic Encounters:
Contemporary Travel/Writing in the European High North. Roger won
the silver medal for Travel Writer of the Year in 2010 from the
British Guild of Travel Writers. He is fluent in Norwegian and
Russian, and holds a doctorate from the University of Oxford.
James Proctor first came across all things Nordic as a student.
After mistakenly wandering into a Swedish lecture, he soon realised
that his native Yorkshire dialect, liberally laced with dozens of
old Viking words, was going to make learning this offbeat
Scandinavian language a doddle. And so began a love affair with the
Nordic countries, which has endured to this day - 30 years or so
later. As the BBC's Scandinavia correspondent in the 90s, James
travelled widely across the Nordic countries and has since written
no fewer than six travel guides to the region. He first visited
Svalbard in 2017 and, despite his knowledge of northern countries,
was still struck by the fact that it takes a full 1½ hours by
jet-engined 737 to reach Svalbard from northernmost Lapland. A trip
to Svalbard will always be one of those once-in-a-lifetime
adventures and James is glad to count himself among the members of
this still rather exclusive club who have made it to the High
Arctic. Today he divides his time between the South of France and
his beloved Yorkshire.
Anika Paust left her studies in Aerospace Engineering to travel the
world, but ended up in the tiny town of Longyearbyen just 1,300km
from the North Pole, and on the opposite side of the planet from
her home town of Perth, Western Australia. Her work as the
international sales manager for a major tour operator enables her
to combine two of her passions: travel and Svalbard. Having lived
in Longyearbyen since 2008, she has seen a number of changes to the
town and the region over the last few years, and is excited to see
the development of the archipelago as a sustainable destination for
year-round tourism.
A mass of useful information.-- "The Express"
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