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The Resilient Earth: Science, Global Warming and the Fate of Humanity

The Resilient Earth: Science, Global Warming and the Fate of Humanity
By Dr. Doug L. Hoffman, Allen Simmons

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Product Description

A million years after the birth of our sun, the violent explosion of a nearby supernova nearly ended life on Earth before it began. Over the next four and a half billion years, forces of nature shaped our planet and the life it harbored. Barely surviving the traumatic birth of the Moon, buffeted by supernovae, and bombarded by asteroids, the resilient Earth endured. And despite planet-freezing ice ages, devastating mass extinctions, and ever changing climate, life not only survived, it thrived. Today, we are told all life on Earth is threatened by a new peril--human-caused global warming. The Resilient Earth presents the science behind global warming for a general audience, separating fact from fiction and truth from exaggeration.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13495 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-10-29
  • Released on: 2008-10-29
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 404 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Authors Doug L. Hoffman and Allen Simmons both have strong backgrounds in science and computer modeling. Hoffman has a PhD in Computer Science from the U. of North Carolina where he did research in Molecular Dynamics Simulations and high-speed comparison methods for RNA, DNA and protein sequences. Currently he serves as senior grid architect for a major IP company and as an adjunct Professor of Computer Science at U. of Central Arkansas and Hendrix College. Simmons has a BSEE from U. of Miami and wrote the computer systems software for the world¿s first weather satellites-TIROS-Television/Infra-Red Observation Satellite. After TIROS, he spent 12 years working with scientists and engineers on NIMBUS weather satellites which collected meteorological, atmospheric, geological, and oceanographic data. NIMBUS had a profound impact on knowledge of Earth¿s dynamic behavior. On the island of St. Croix, USVI, Simmons and Hoffman developed a computer system to track objects at great ocean depths.


Customer Reviews

An eye-opener to be read and reread5
Until I read the "The Resilient Earth" by coauthors Hoffman and Simmons, I did not spend much time thinking about the issue of human-caused global warming. I knew there were those who claimed humans were destroying our planet and there were others who did not agree, and challenged that principle. Now, after reading this wonderful book, I do care about our planet, but I have become somewhat skeptical of the idea that humans can change the climate to the point that we are doomed. In Chapter 1, the first lines in the book read: "Scientists observe nature, then develop theories that describe their observations. Science is driven by nature itself, and nature gives us no choice. It is what it is." How beautiful those words are, and they set the tone of the entire book. I have learned how resilient our Earth is - from its very beginning to its present day. The book is a journey of science and scientific discovery. I was amazed how many scientists made discoveries outside their disciplines. As an example, a man named Joseph Fourier discovered that certain gases could trap heat. Fourier, a mathematician and physicist, made that discovery in 1829. The book describes just how complex Earth's atmosphere is, and that it takes almost all scientific disciplines to try and unravel nature's mysteries. I learned how important the roles of geology, paleontology, glaciology, oceanography, physics, chemistry, and many more disciplines play in understanding, not only the complex puzzle called our atmosphere, but also the history of our planet. Most importantly, I learned how Earth warmed and cooled in cycles, long before modern man arrived. Best told was the story of Otzi the Iceman, who died in 3300 BC and his perfectly preserved body was found in 1991, buried in ice on the Italian Alps. Otzi laid in peace during the rise and fall of the Roman Empire, WW II, and the rise of the United States. What I learned from Otzi, made me think of Greenland. Why was that place, now covered in ice, called "Greenland?" This book influenced my life. I now recycle plastic and paper. I raised my thermostat for summer and lowered it for winter. I use less water. But I learned, reading this treasure of information, that it takes 226 million years for our solar system to make one orbit around the center of our galaxy. That puts the whole climate issue in perspective. Who can imagine what we might run into as we porpoise and sashay on our 226 million year journey. The easy style and anecdotes of "The Resilient Earth" are gems. I recommend this book for everyone. It will open the mind and make one think of things never thought of before. Such as, how lucky we humans are to have survived the ebb and flow of ice on this resilient Earth. Imagine New York City buried under ice, a mile high. I wonder how many times that happened, and could it happen again. Nature, with its infinite reach, will decide that for us. Kudos for the authors of "The Resilient Earth."



Finally available in paperback!5
Allen and I would like to announce that, after many delays and just in time for the Christmas gift giving season, our book, The Resilient Earth, is now available for purchase on Amazon.com. The Resilient Earth is a book about climate science and global warming but it also includes a wide range of topics, including: the history of global warming, the discovery of ice ages, mass extinctions, the history of science, alternative energy and future energy policy. It is written for a general readership audience with many charts and pictures but very few (almost no) equations. The book is a trade paperback (6x9) with over 400 pages, 161 black & white illustrations, and more than 500 references.

Here is the table of contents listing the titles of the various chapters:

Preface
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Global Warming-The Crisis Defined
Chapter 3 We are in an Ice Age?
Chapter 4 Unprecedented Climate Change?
Chapter 5 Ice Ages
Chapter 6 Ancient Extinctions
Chapter 7 Changing Atmospheric Gases
Chapter 8 Moving Continents & Ocean Currents
Chapter 9 Variations In Earth's Orbit
Chapter 10 Varying Solar Radiation
Chapter 11 Cosmic Rays
Chapter 12 How Science Works
Chapter 13 Experimental Data and Error
Chapter 14 The Limits of Climate Science
Chapter 15 Prophets of Doom
Chapter 16 The Worst That Could Happen
Chapter 17 Mitigation Strategies
Chapter 18 A Plan for the Future
Chapter 19 The Fate of Planet Earth
Afterward
Alphabetical Index
References

This is not just a book about science and the current global warming hysteria, it is a book about the amazing planet we live on and the tenacious life that inhabits it. You will find interesting facts and historical tidbits such as:

* Did you know that there is a submarine canyon as large as the Grand Canyon just off the coast of New York City?
* Did you know that there is a species of extinct mammoth named after an American president and why?
* Do you know the story behind the death of Ötzi the ice man?
* Did you know that more than a billion years before the "atomic age" there was a natural nuclear reactor running in Africa?
* Did you know that there is a society, VHEMT, that wants humanity to stop having children and die out?
* Did you know that for most of the time that complex life has been present on Earth there have been no polar icecaps?

All this and much more awaits you in The Resilient Earth.

Regards,
Doug

I wish this book were a best seller5
Everything I have been trying to explain to my friends about the exaggeration of "human caused" climate change is articulated in this book. I'm not quite done with it yet, as I am reading it cover to cover. It does a great job of providing a clear high level understanding of so many integrated topics (which is of course the only way to understand the more focused questions facing us today.) I think the authors have done an outstanding job and I recommend this to anyone willing to take the time to learn and understand the wonders of this planet.