Synopsis In this historical perspective on global warming, Christianson analyzes climatic changes spanning 200 years, documents the techniques industrialists used to discredit global warming research, and traces the impact of the 1997 Kyoto Conference on the Environment.
| Details | | Publication Date: | 1999-05-01 |
| Size | | Length: | 305 pages | | Height: | 9.5 in | | Width: | 5.8 in | | Thickness: | 1.2 in | | Weight: | 20.8 oz |
Publisher's Note There is no longer any doubt that the earth is warming; the question remains, why? For historian Gale Christianson, the emergence of global warming is one of the most compelling stories in history of humankind, made all the richer for having been a slowly developing phenomenon. In his brilliantly constructed book GREENHOUSE, Christianson blends the research of a scholar with a novelist's storytelling skill, offering an invaluable perspective on what may be the most remarkable change in nature since the retreat of the glaciers some 10,000 years ago. Like a train coming at you from a distance, global warming is first a faint, echoing whistle, then a puff of smoke, and ultimately, with a rush, an unavoidable reality. Finding the clues to global warming both deep in the past and right before our eyes, Christianson introduces a memorable and unlikely cast of characters and events. From the demise of the Anasazi in the American Southwest and the Vikings in Greenland, which unveil the close connection between global warming and cooling, to the politics behind the 1997 Kyoto Conference on the Environment, Christianson delves deep into the connection between human beings and the planet. Scientists, inventors, and other pioneers are woven into the narrative among them, Joseph Fourier, the French natural philosopher who, at the turn of the nineteenth century, first envisioned the Earth as a bell jar, Richard Arkwright, who launched the modern factory system, and chemist Charles Keeling, who accidentally discovered, in 1955, that carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere were rising. Their stories, in Christianson's crystal prose, urgently lead us to rethink what used to be called "man's place in nature." By gradually bringing the full range of its elements into focus, Christianson allows readers to make up their own minds as to the causes and consequences of global warming. For anyone interested in the history of science and the fate of planet Earth, GREENHOUSE is a unique and landmark book that will help shape the issues of the inevitable public debate to come.
Industry Reviews "This is an oddly stimulating book that sometimes suggests a public television documentary. Images flit by, historical characters make sudden entries and equally sudden exits....But if you can get beyond this jumpy format, you will be rewarded by a fascinating if alarming story." New York Times Book Review - Witold Rybczynski (07/11/1999)
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