000 02172nam a22002297a 4500
003 OSt
005 20230314113228.0
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020 _a9780226532585
_ccloth : alk. paper
020 _a0226532585
_ccloth : alk. paper
040 _bEnglish
_cFoundation University Library
082 _222
_a577.727
_b577.727 M692 2009
100 _aMitchell, Alanna
_eAuthor
_96444
245 _aYou searched for: Title: Seasick: ocean change and the extinction of life on earth
_cby Alanna Mitchell
260 _aChicago Ill. :
_bUniversity of Chicago Press,
_c 2009
300 _a161 pages :
_c24 cm
504 _aIncludes bibliography [pages 139-152].
520 _a"We have long lorded over the ocean. But only recently have we become aware of the myriad life-forms beneath its waves. We now know that this delicate ecosystem is our life-support systems; it regulates the planet's temperatures and climate and comprises 99 percent of living space on earth. So when we change the chemistry of the whole ocean system, as we are now, life as we know it is threatened. In Seasick, veteran science journalist Alanna Mitchell dives beneath the surface of the world's oceans to give readers a sense of how this watery realm can be managed and preserved, and with it life on earth. Each chapters features a different group of researchers, who introduce readers to the importance of ocean currents, the building coral structures, of the effects of acidification. With Mitchell at the helm, readers submerge 3,000 feet to gather sea sponges that may contribute to cancer care, see firsthand the lava lamp-like dead zone covering 17,000 square kilometers in the Gulf of Mexico, and witness the simultaneous spawning of corals under a full moon in Panama. The fist book to look at the planetary environmental crisis through the lens of the global ocean, Seasick takes the reader on an motional journey through a hidden area of the planet and urges conservation and reverence for the fount from which all life on earth sprang." --Jacket
650 _aMarine pollution.
_96445
650 _aExtinction (Biology).
_96446
942 _2ddc
_cBK
_n0
999 _c3108
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