Ralph Alger Bagnold
Born
  Plymouth (Stoke-Devonport), England, The United Kingdom
  Website
  
  Genre
  
  |   | Libyan Sands: Travel in a Dead World 
          
                
              —
                published
               1935
              —
              13 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | The Physics of Blown Sand and Desert Dunes 
          
                
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                published
               1971
              —
              15 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | Sand, Wind, and War: Memoirs of a Desert Explorer 
          
                
              —
                published
               1991
              —
              3 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | The Physics of Sediment Transport by Wind and Water: A Collection of Hallmark Papers 
          
                
              —
                published
               1988
          
         |  | 
* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
      “There was a glorious stillness after the vibration and rattle of the day. The silence was absolute. We were two hundred miles from Cairo, and there was nothing near by to make a sound. Outside in the open one listened expectantly for some small noise, a cricket chirping or a cock’s crow, but nothing came; only a little gust of cold dry air that eddied softly in the hollows of one’s ears. It seemed odd almost that the stars overhead, twinkling with a frosty vigour, could do so without making some sound about it.”
    
― Libyan Sands: Travel in a Dead World
  ― Libyan Sands: Travel in a Dead World
      “It was a dead world upon which all life, all movement except that of the wind, had ceased from the far-off time when the primeval Medusa had looked out over the land and petrified it for ever.”
    
― Libyan Sands: Travel in a Dead World
  ― Libyan Sands: Travel in a Dead World
      “One morning while we were out doing fieldwork we saw a mushroom cloud rising from the horizon. This was followed by an intense shock wave. The wind happened to be blowing in our direction, and a little later things began to arrive out of the sky—unwinding rolls of toilet paper, pieces of charts, and wood splinters; then came a naval officer’s sleeve with an arm still inside it. Later we learned that a fully laden minelayer, HMS Bulwark, in the Medway estuary and about to go to sea, had exploded in one tremendous detonation.”
    
― Sand, Wind, and War: Memoirs of a Desert Explorer
  ― Sand, Wind, and War: Memoirs of a Desert Explorer
Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Around the World ...: Libya | 13 | 596 | Mar 02, 2025 11:37AM | 
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