A vault of expeditionary record and learned reflection from 1913. Evidence of journeys, maps, debates. As a geographical society yearbook and historical travel anthology, the Royal Geographical Society Year-Book And Record 1913 assembles contemporary reports, scholarly commentary and empirical observations that illuminate early twentieth century history and the arc of British imperial exploration. Part exploration records collection, part world geography reference, it offers indispensable context for researchers, teachers and armchair travellers alike, tracing how professional geography sought to order knowledge of distant lands. Readers tracing the legacy of Victorian era explorers will recognise continuities of method and motive; for casual browsers the volume reads as a richly textured portrait of an era. At once a practical academic research resource and an attractive example of antique travel literature, it also makes for a notable 1910s non-fiction book and an unusually thoughtful history enthusiasts gift. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. More than a relic, the 1913 yearbook occupies a significant place among Royal Society publications: it documents a transitional moment in global mapping and imperial debate and helps explain how fieldwork and enquiry shaped professional geography. As a dependable world geography reference it bridges field observation and institutional scholarship, offering historians, cartographers and bibliographers a practical entry point for tracing networks of exploration and scientific exchange. Together the entries and notices form a living archive of how geographic knowledge circulated across institutions and empires, and the volume therefore rewards cross-disciplinary study. The reissue's careful preparation brings the 1913 material into dialogue with current scholarship while retaining the period voice. Whether consulted as an academic research resource, savoured by casual readers, or prized by classic-literature collectors, this edition restores access to a primary voice from a pivotal decade.