Earth's Deep History: How It Was Discovered and Why It Matters
Martin J.S. Rudwick- ISBN: 022642197X, 9780226421971
- Page count: 0
- Published: 2016-11-03
- Format: Paperback
- Publisher: University of Chicago Press
- Language:
- Author: Martin J.S. Rudwick
Earth has been witness to mammoths and dinosaurs, global ice ages, continents colliding or splitting apart, and comets and asteroids crashing catastrophically to the surface, as well as the birth of humans who are curious to understand it. But how was all this discovered? How was the evidence for it collected and interpreted? And what kinds of people have sought to reconstruct this past that no human witnessed or recorded?
Martin J. S. Rudwick, the premier historian of the Earth sciences, provides a sweeping and accessible account of Earth's long and astonishingly eventful history in Earth's Deep History. Rudwick begins in the seventeenth century with Archbishop James Ussher, who famously dated the creation of the cosmos to 4004 BC. His narrative later turns to the crucial period of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, when inquisitive intellectuals, who came to call themselves "geologists," began to interpret rocks and fossils, mountains and volcanoes, as natural archives of Earth's history. He demonstrates shows how this geological evidence was and still continues to be used to reconstruct a history of the Earth that is as varied and unpredictable as human history itself. Along the way, Rudwick rejects the popular view of this story as a conflict between science and religion and shows how the modern scientific account of the Earth's deep history retains strong roots in Judaeo-Christian ideas.
Though the story of the Earth is inconceivable in length, Rudwick moves with grace from the earliest imaginings of our planet's deep past to today's scientific discoveries, proving that this is a tale at once timeless and timely.
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