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An Explorer's Notebook: Essays on Life, History, and Climate
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Barnes and Noble
An Explorer's Notebook: Essays on Life, History, and Climate
Current price: $18.00
Barnes and Noble
An Explorer's Notebook: Essays on Life, History, and Climate
Current price: $18.00
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Size: Paperback
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Best known for his #1 international bestseller
The Weather Makers
, Tim Flannery is one of the world’s most influential scientists, a foremost expert on climate change credited with discovering more species than Charles Darwin. But Flannery didn’t come to his knowledge overnight. With its selection of exhilarating essays and articles written over the past thirty years,
An Explorer’s Notebook
charts the evolution of a young scientist doing fieldwork in remote locations into the major thinker who has changed the way we think about global warming. In these thirty pieces, Flannery writes about his journeys in the jungles of New Guinea and Indonesia, about the extraordinary people he met and the species he discovered. He writes about matters as wide-ranging as love, insects, population, water, and the stresses we put on the environment. He shows us how we can better predict our future by understanding the profound history of life on Earth. And he chronicles the seismic shift in the world’s attitude toward climate change.
is classic Flannery—wide-ranging, eye-opening science, conveyed with richly detailed storytelling.
The Weather Makers
, Tim Flannery is one of the world’s most influential scientists, a foremost expert on climate change credited with discovering more species than Charles Darwin. But Flannery didn’t come to his knowledge overnight. With its selection of exhilarating essays and articles written over the past thirty years,
An Explorer’s Notebook
charts the evolution of a young scientist doing fieldwork in remote locations into the major thinker who has changed the way we think about global warming. In these thirty pieces, Flannery writes about his journeys in the jungles of New Guinea and Indonesia, about the extraordinary people he met and the species he discovered. He writes about matters as wide-ranging as love, insects, population, water, and the stresses we put on the environment. He shows us how we can better predict our future by understanding the profound history of life on Earth. And he chronicles the seismic shift in the world’s attitude toward climate change.
is classic Flannery—wide-ranging, eye-opening science, conveyed with richly detailed storytelling.