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Climate change : biological and human aspects / Jonathan Cowie.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2013.Edition: Second editionDescription: xxii, 558 pages : illustrations, maps ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9781107603561
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 551.6
Partial contents:
An introduction to climate change -- Principal indicators of past climates -- Past climate change -- The Oligocene to the Quaternary: climate and biology -- Present climate and biological change -- Current warming and likely future impacts -- The human ecology of climate change -- Sustainability and policy --
Summary: "This book is about biology and human ecology as they relate to climate change. Let's take it as read that climate change is one of the most urgent and fascinating science-related issues of our time and that you are interested in the subject: for if you were not you would not be reading this now. Indeed, there are many books on climate change but nearly all, other than the voluminous Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, tend to focus on a specialist aspect of climate, be it weather, palaeoclimatology, modelling and so forth. Even books relating to biological dimensions of climate change tend to be specialist, with a focus that may relate to agriculture, health or palaeoecology. These are, by and large, excellent value provided that they cover the specialist ground which readers seek. However, the biology of climate change is so broad that the average life-sciences student, or specialist seeking a broader context in which to view their own field, has difficulty in finding a wide-ranging review of the biology and human ecology of climate change. Non-bioscience specialists with an interest in climate change (geologists, geographers, atmospheric chemists, etc.) face a similar problem"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Colección general Colección general Biblioteca Yachay Tech 551.6 C8746c 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Ej. 1 Available 000992
Colección general Colección general Biblioteca Yachay Tech 551.6 C8746c 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Ej. 2 Available 000995
Colección general Colección general Biblioteca Yachay Tech 551.6 C8746c 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Ej. 3 Available 003138
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

An introduction to climate change -- Principal indicators of past climates -- Past climate change -- The Oligocene to the Quaternary: climate and biology -- Present climate and biological change -- Current warming and likely future impacts -- The human ecology of climate change -- Sustainability and policy --

"This book is about biology and human ecology as they relate to climate change. Let's take it as read that climate change is one of the most urgent and fascinating science-related issues of our time and that you are interested in the subject: for if you were not you would not be reading this now. Indeed, there are many books on climate change but nearly all, other than the voluminous Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, tend to focus on a specialist aspect of climate, be it weather, palaeoclimatology, modelling and so forth. Even books relating to biological dimensions of climate change tend to be specialist, with a focus that may relate to agriculture, health or palaeoecology. These are, by and large, excellent value provided that they cover the specialist ground which readers seek. However, the biology of climate change is so broad that the average life-sciences student, or specialist seeking a broader context in which to view their own field, has difficulty in finding a wide-ranging review of the biology and human ecology of climate change. Non-bioscience specialists with an interest in climate change (geologists, geographers, atmospheric chemists, etc.) face a similar problem"--

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