HomeScience & Math BooksUnder a Green Sky: Global Warming, the Mass Extinctions of the Past, and What They Can Tell Us About Our Future
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Under a Green Sky: Global Warming, the Mass Extinctions of the Past, and What They Can Tell Us About Our Future

hardcoverApril 10, 2007
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ISBN-13: 9780061137914 ISBN-10: 006113791X
Publisher
Collins
Binding
hardcover
Published
April 10, 2007
Weight
1.0 lbs
Dimensions
22.90×2.30×15.20 cm

About this book

Under a Green Sky: Global Warming, the Mass Extinctions of the Past, and What They Can Tell Us About Our Future by Ward, Peter D.. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780061137914.

By looking backward at the course of great extinctions, a paleontologist sees what the future holds. More than 200 million years ago, a cataclysmic event known as the Permian extinction destroyed more than 90 percent of all species and nearly 97 percent of all living things. Its origins have long been a puzzle for paleontologists. During the 1990s and the early part of this century, a great battle was fought between those who thought that death had come from above and those who thought something more complicated was at work. Paleontologist Peter. D. Ward, fresh from helping prove that an asteroid had killed the dinosaurs, turned to the Permian problem, and he has come to a stunning conclusion. In his investigations of the fates of several groups of mollusks during that extinction and others, he discovered that the near-total devastation at the end of the Permian period was caused by rising levels of carbon dioxide leading to climate change. But its not the heat (nor the humidity) thats directly responsible for the extinctions, and the story of the discovery of what is responsible makes for a fascinating, globe-spanning adventure. In Under a Green Sky, Ward explains how the Permian extinction as well as four others happened, and describes the freakish oceans—belching poisonous gas—and sky—slightly green and always hazy—that would have attended them. Those ancient upheavals demonstrate that the threat of climate change cannot be ignored, lest the worlds life today—ourselves included—face the same dire fate that has overwhelmed our planet several times before.