Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History Of The Twentieth Century WorldW. W. Norton & Company, 17 apr 2001 - 421 pagine "McNeill's work is a fruitful compound of history and science. McNeill infuses a substrate of ecology with a lively historical sensibility to the significance of politics, international relations, technological change, and great events. He charts and explores the breathtaking ways in which we have changed the natural world with a keen eye for character and a refreshing respect for the unforeseen in history."--BOOK JACKET. |
Sommario
List of Maps and Tables Foreword by Paul Kennedy XV | 1941 |
List of Maps and Tables | 1945 |
Prologue Peculiarities ofaProdigal Century 3 | 1955 |
TheLithosphereandPedospherezTheCrustoftheEarth 21 | 1972 |
10 | 1973 |
Regional and Global History 84 | 1981 |
THE AIR IN APAN 92 | 1987 |
ACID RAIN 99 | 1992 |
LAKES AND EUTROPHICATION 136 | |
CONCLUSION 147 | |
TAMING FLOODS AND DRAINING WETLANDS 183 | |
COASTLINES 189 | |
7 | |
TABLES | |
So What? 357 | |
BIBLIOGRAPHY 363 | |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the Twentieth ... J. R. McNeill Anteprima limitata - 2001 |
Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the Twentieth ... John Robert McNeill Anteprima non disponibile - 2000 |
Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History Of The Twentieth ... J R Mcneill Anteprima non disponibile - 2000 |
Parole e frasi comuni
acid rain Africa agriculture air pollution algal blooms American animals Aral Sea Asia atmosphere became began biological Britain cars chemical China coal colonial countries cropland crops declined deforestation disease earth ecological effects Egypt emissions energy engines Environment environmental change especially Europe European eutrophication farm farmers fertilizer fish fisheries forests fossil fuels German global Green Revolution grew hectares helped human humankind impact India Indonesia industrial irrigation Japan Japanese killed kilometers labor Lake land late less mainly maize Mediterranean Mexico City migration million modern Nile nineteenth century nitrogen North America northern nuclear numbers OCEAN ozone percent plants political population growth problems production regime region rice river Ruhr scale sewage smog smoke social societies South Soviet spread sulfur dioxide tion tons took tropical twentieth century United urban USSR wastes wetlands whales wheat World War II world’s