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Hardcover The Sindbad Voyage Book

ISBN: 0399127577

ISBN13: 9780399127571

The Sindbad Voyage

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Covering the fundamentals of stochastic processes, this title includes the basics of Poisson processes, Markov chains, branching processes, martingales, and diffusion processes. It presents a unique blend of theory and applications, with special emphasis on mathematical modelling, computational techniques and examples from the biological sciences. It is appropriate for students in applied mathematics, biostatistics, computational biology, computer...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

True adventure well told

I have read quite a few of Tim Serverin's books. He recreates a journey of historical (or fictional) past and from the keel up presents a wonderfully written account of the venture. I first read Severin's "The Brendan Voyage" in its re-creation of St. Brendan's North Atlantic crossing in the 8th century by oxen leather boat. Here again, the author re-creates an authentic ancient Arabian sailing boat for a journey from Oman to China (across the Indian Ocean and through the Malacca Strait). If you enjoy adventure stories of men, seamanship, a voyage against the elements...this is a book for you.

Reconstruction of ancient traders' voyages.

..I bought this a long time ago, along with the other early travel reconstruction books by Thor Heyerdal. Since then I have become a fan of Mr.Severin's work - he is a dedicated enthusiast, and that comes over loud and clear in his books. He sometimes gets carried away on the tide of his enthusiasm and repeats himself several times, but you can forgive that, as his eagerness and will to learn drag you along with him on his wild dreams.The Sindbad voyage was an attempt to see if a sewn wooden boat could make it to China, using only primitive navigational instruments, in support of a theory of the extent of early Arab trading, considering that the Sindbad legends may have had a basis in fact.The boat is a hand-made, no-metal reconstruction using traditional Arab boat-building techniques, which have only recently fallen out of favour in preference to iron nails and steel bolts. Oman was used as the base for the boat-building and, given its long history of trading with Africa and India, was deemed to be the best place to start the voyage from - the boat's name 'Sohar' comes from one of the major towns on the nothern Omani coast. Extensive research went into finding the best materials, techniques and above all, locating artisans who still knew something of sewn boats, and people who could still handle sails. The description of that quest and the actual building is a pleasure to read - Mr. Severin's infectious enthusiasm communicates itself through the pages to the reader. The voyage itself is a tale of acclimation to strange food, cultures, and heat, the camaraderie that grows between vsstly different cultures, and relief that the boat survives all that the weather can throw at it, with an ease that a more rigid construction would have complained at. So strong is the boat that it still stands today on a roundabout outside the Al Bustan Palace Hotel in Muscat, as beautiful as ever.I've read the book several times and it still comes across as fresh as the day I first picked it up. Enjoy! *****
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