| Global Catastrophes: A Very Short Introduction |
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Much of astrobiology is concerned not only with what conditions life is thought to have emerged under and what environmental extremes it can survive, but also what sorts of hazards can threaten life on a planetary scale. And this pocket-sized book from OUP forms the perfect handbook to all the ways the world could end.
Bill McGuire is professor of Geophysical Hazards at University College London and heads their Benfield Hazard Research Centre, so is certainly well-qualified for such doomsaying. Natural hazards such as tsunamis, volcanoes, and earthquakes are all featured in early chapters. While all of these would be pretty unpleasant experiences if you were to be personally caught up in one, most such events simply don't pack enough of a punch to threaten life globally. McGuire moves on to events lying in the extreme tail of more 'everyday' dangers, and discusses the hazard presented by thankfully-rare super-volcanoes. By injecting so much fine dust and sulphur dioxide into the upper atmosphere, such eruptions can trigger a volcanic-winter and truly alter the climate worldwide, potentially knocking the global biosphere.
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 20 January 2009 01:13 |


