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Given that the an average page of paper is about 0.01 cm thick (depending on the ream), and one league = 555,600 cm, then 20,000 league would be about 1,111,200,000,000 pages under the sea! Unless you're asking how many pages are in the book, which is about 352 pages.
1907
1916
1954
1973
1985
2 in 1997
2004
As of 2013 a new version is in development.
Twenty Thousand Leagues is by Jules Verne. There are many different editions of the book. The Createspace paperback is 212 pages. The Sterling Unabridged Classic is 336 pages.
1870
the ride is at Disney Land CA.
The book wasn't about what he did UNDER the sea at 20000 leagues because the Nautilus reaches about 10000 leagues under the sea and the pressure was too big that it decided to go back to the open sea. This book is about M.Aronnax's adventure around the sea, and he calculated that he traveled 20000 leagues of the sea all together. He called it "under the sea" because the Nautilus is a submarine so it's obvious that he stayed "under" the sea most of the time.
He saw Atlantis, a ruined civilization, a petrified forest, and a volcano
The Captain of the submarine Nautilus in Jules Verne's book 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
It of course depends on the particular story but I think that you are referring to Captain Nemo (means no man) of 'Twenty Thousand leagues Under the Sea' and 'Mysterious Island' fame.
20000 leagues under the sea
How did farragut motivate the crew to spot the monster 20000 leagues under the sea?
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the Nautilus
Disneyland - 1954 20000 Leagues Under the Sea - 23.5 was released on: USA: 24 October 1976
There is a Jules Verne book which was made into a film called, 20000 Leagues under the Sea. Maybe this has been wrongly stated as 20000 Leagues below the Sea.
Disneyland - 1954 20000 Leagues Under the Sea 23-5 was released on: USA: 24 October 1976
He killed a giant cephalopod.
On which day the monster was sighted
"20,000 Leagues under the Sea", a novel by Jules Verne.
the ride is at Disney Land CA.
Yes, many films: 1905, 1907, 1916, 1954, 1973, 1985, 1997, 2004. The most famous is "20000 Leagues Under the Sea" (1954). Stars Kirk Douglas, James Mason, Peter Lorre.