New Zealand Geographic
Encyclopedia
New Zealand Geographic is a magazine
published in Auckland
, New Zealand
. It is in the format popularised by National Geographic but focusing on the biodiversity, geography and culture of New Zealand; New Zealand's interests abroad, and that of the adjoining region: Antarctica and nearby Pacific Islands.
New Zealand Geographic is issued bimonthly. It features four to six main features per issue, packaged with regular and occasional columns. Like other geographic magazines, its main point of difference is the length and editorial depth of articles, with some exceeding 30 pages.
Each volume draws from a wide range of subjects and typically diverse categories: locations, natural history, technology, industry, history, biology, geology, astronomy, culture, and exploration/adventure. This gamut occasionally stretches to biographies, with pieces appearing from time to time on explorers, scientists, artists and notorious individuals. Locations beyond the Pacific are inevitably featured in connection with New Zealand interests: New Zealanders at war, New Zealand peacekeepers or volunteers abroad, or tracing the paths of New Zealand explorers and adventurers.
The publication is strongly oriented toward photography and it tends to attract dedicated wildlife, landscape and social commentary-style photographers into its pool of contributors. Contributing essayists are often specialists or individuals who hold a deep interest in a narrow field, which makes their style and the informational content of their writing different from that of professional journalists. The tone of pieces seldom deviates from political neutrality — an “information without advocacy” stance — although many stories explore conservation and other emotive issues. While most New Zealand Geographic articles are a combination of essay and photo-narrative, some articles consist entirely of photo-essays with extended captions.
The magazine has a science flavour, reflecting the background of Kennedy Warne (co-founder of the magazine in 1989), who holds a master’s degree in marine biology.
Magazine
Magazines, periodicals, glossies or serials are publications, generally published on a regular schedule, containing a variety of articles. They are generally financed by advertising, by a purchase price, by pre-paid magazine subscriptions, or all three...
published in Auckland
Auckland
The Auckland metropolitan area , in the North Island of New Zealand, is the largest and most populous urban area in the country with residents, percent of the country's population. Auckland also has the largest Polynesian population of any city in the world...
, New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses and numerous smaller islands. The country is situated some east of Australia across the Tasman Sea, and roughly south of the Pacific island nations of New Caledonia, Fiji, and Tonga...
. It is in the format popularised by National Geographic but focusing on the biodiversity, geography and culture of New Zealand; New Zealand's interests abroad, and that of the adjoining region: Antarctica and nearby Pacific Islands.
New Zealand Geographic is issued bimonthly. It features four to six main features per issue, packaged with regular and occasional columns. Like other geographic magazines, its main point of difference is the length and editorial depth of articles, with some exceeding 30 pages.
Each volume draws from a wide range of subjects and typically diverse categories: locations, natural history, technology, industry, history, biology, geology, astronomy, culture, and exploration/adventure. This gamut occasionally stretches to biographies, with pieces appearing from time to time on explorers, scientists, artists and notorious individuals. Locations beyond the Pacific are inevitably featured in connection with New Zealand interests: New Zealanders at war, New Zealand peacekeepers or volunteers abroad, or tracing the paths of New Zealand explorers and adventurers.
The publication is strongly oriented toward photography and it tends to attract dedicated wildlife, landscape and social commentary-style photographers into its pool of contributors. Contributing essayists are often specialists or individuals who hold a deep interest in a narrow field, which makes their style and the informational content of their writing different from that of professional journalists. The tone of pieces seldom deviates from political neutrality — an “information without advocacy” stance — although many stories explore conservation and other emotive issues. While most New Zealand Geographic articles are a combination of essay and photo-narrative, some articles consist entirely of photo-essays with extended captions.
The magazine has a science flavour, reflecting the background of Kennedy Warne (co-founder of the magazine in 1989), who holds a master’s degree in marine biology.