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Earth's Climate Evolution

eBook
ISBN/EAN: 9781118897386
Umbreit-Nr.: 8425956

Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 416 S., 12.30 MB
Format in cm:
Einband: Keine Angabe

Erschienen am 13.07.2015
Auflage: 1/2015


E-Book
Format: PDF
DRM: Adobe DRM
€ 71,99
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  • Zusatztext
    • <p>To understand climate change today, we first need to know how Earths climate changed over the past 450 million years. Finding answers depends upon contributions from a wide range of sciences, not just the rock record uncovered by geologists. In<i>Earths Climate Evolution</i>, Colin Summerhayes analyzes reports and records of past climate change dating back to the late 18th century to uncover key patterns in the climate system. The book will transform debate and set the agenda for the next generation of thought about future climate change.</p><p>The book takes a unique approach to the subject providing a description of the greenhouse and icehouse worlds of the past 450 million years since land plants emerged, ignoring major earlier glaciations like that of Snowball Earth, which occurred around 600 million years ago in a world free of land plants. It describes the evolution of thinking in palaeoclimatology and introduces the main players in the field and how their ideas were received and, in many cases, subsequently modified.  It records the arguments and discussions about the merits of different ideas along the way. It also includes several notes made from the authors own personal involvement in palaeoclimatological and palaeoceanographic studies, and from his experience of working alongside several of the major players in these fields in recent years.</p><p>This book will be an invaluable reference for both undergraduate and postgraduate students taking courses in related fields and will also be of interest to historians of science and/or geology, climatology and oceanography. It should also be of interest to the wider scientific and engineering community, high school science students, policy makers, and environmental NGOs.<br /><br /><b>Reviews:<br /></b><br />"Outstanding in its presentation of the facts and a good read in the way that it intersperses the climate story with the author's own experiences. [This book] puts the climate story into a compelling geological history."<br /><i>-Dr. James Baker</i></p><p>"The book is written in very clear and concise prose, [and takes] original, enlightening, and engaging approach to talking about 'ideas' from the perspective of the scientists who promoted them."<br /><i>-Professor Christopher R. Scotese<br /><br /></i>"A thrilling ride through continental drift and its consequences."<br /><i>- Professor Gerald R. North</i><br /><br />"Written in a style and language which can be easily understood by laymen as well as scientists."<br /><i>- Professor Dr Jörn Thiede<br /><br /></i>"What makes this book particularly distinctive is how well it builds in the narrative of change in ideas over time."<br /><i><i>- Holocene book reviews</i>, May 2016<br /><br /></i>"This is a fascinating book and the authors biographical approach gives it great human appeal."<i><br />- E Adlard</i></p>

  • Kurztext
    • To understand climate change today, we first need to know how Earth&rsquo;s climate changed over the past 450 million years. Finding answers depends upon contributions from a wide range of sciences, not just the rock record uncovered by geologists. In Earth&rsquo;s Climate Evolution, Colin Summerhayes analyzes reports and records of past climate change dating back to the late 18th century to uncover key patterns in the climate system. The book will transform debate and set the agenda for the next generation of thought about future climate change. The book takes a unique approach to the subject providing a description of the greenhouse and icehouse worlds of the past 450 million years since land plants emerged, ignoring major earlier glaciations like that of Snowball Earth, which occurred around 600 million years ago in a world free of land plants. It describes the evolution of thinking in palaeoclimatology and introduces the main players in the field and how their ideas were received and, in many cases, subsequently modified.&nbsp; It records the arguments and discussions about the merits of different ideas along the way. It also includes several notes made from the author&rsquo;s own personal involvement in palaeoclimatological and palaeoceanographic studies, and from his experience of working alongside several of the major players in these fields in recent years. This book will be an invaluable reference for both undergraduate and postgraduate students taking courses in related fields and will also be of interest to historians of science and/or geology, climatology and oceanography. It should also be of interest to the wider scientific and engineering community, high school science students, policy makers, and environmental NGOs.Reviews:&quote;Outstanding in its presentation of the facts and a good read in the way that it intersperses the climate story with the author&apos;s own experiences. [This book] puts the climate story into a compelling geological history.&quote;&nbsp;-Dr. James Baker &quote;The book is written in very clear and concise prose, [and takes] original, enlightening, and engaging approach to talking about &apos;ideas&apos; from the perspective of the scientists who promoted them.&quote;&nbsp;-Professor Christopher R. Scotese&quote;A thrilling ride through continental drift and its consequences.&quote;- Professor Gerald R. North&quote;Written in a style and language which can be easily understood by laymen as well as scientists.&quote;- Professor Dr&nbsp;J&ouml;rn Thiede&quote;What makes this book particularly distinctive is how well it builds in the narrative of change in ideas over time.&quote;- Holocene book reviews, May 2016&quote;This is a fascinating book and the author&rsquo;s biographical approach gives it great human appeal.&quote; - E Adlard

  • Autorenportrait
    • <b>Colin Summerhayes</b> is an Emeritus Associate of the Scott Polar Research Institute of Cambridge University. He has carried out research on past climate change in both academia and industry: at Imperial College London; the University of Cape Town; the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; the UKs Institute of Oceanographic Sciences Deacon Laboratory; the UKs Southampton (now National) Oceanography Centre; the Exxon Production Research Company; and the BP Research Company. He has managed research programmes on climate change for the UKs Natural Environment Research Council, the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO, and the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research of the International Council for Science. He has co-edited several books relating to aspects of past or modern climate, including<i>North Atlantic Palaeoceanography</i> (1986),<i>Upwelling Systems</i>:<i>Evolution Since the Early Miocene</i> (1992),<i>Upwelling in the Oceans</i> (1995),<i>Oceanography</i>:<i>An Illustrated Guide</i> (1996),<i>Understanding the Oceans</i> (2001),<i>Oceans 2020</i>:<i>Science, Trends and the Challenge of Sustainability</i> (2002),<i>Antarctic Climate Change and the Environment</i> (2009), and<i>Understanding Earths Polar Challenges</i>:<i>International Polar Year 2007-2008</i> (2011).
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