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The Earth: An Intimate History | 
enlarge | Author: Richard Fortey Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd Category: Book
List Price: £25.00 Buy New: £10.00 You Save: £15.00 (60%)
New (2) Used (10) from £9.96
Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 244700
Media: Hardcover Pages: 501 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.8
ISBN: 0002570114 Dewey Decimal Number: 551 EAN: 9780002570114 ASIN: 0002570114
Publication Date: March 1, 2004 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Excellent condition of this book!
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Amazon.co.uk Review The Earth: An Intimate History is prize-winning science writer Richard Fortey's latest book and an ambitious attempt to tell the geological story of planet Earth for the general reader. Several centuries and the combined efforts of thousands of professional geologists have been required to make any real sense of the Earth's structure and its 4.5 billion-year history. That Fortey manages to turn the most important aspects of all this into an enjoyable narrative for the general reader is a considerable achievement. The book is a sort of guided tour around a number of geological sites with which Fortey is personally familiar, such as the Grand Canyon, the European Alps and Vesuvius (the description of the eruption of Vesuvius and the destruction of Pompeii in AD 79 by Pliny the Younger is probably the first clear and objective description of a geological phenomenon.) He then uses their particular geological details to build a more general story of the geology of earth as it is generally understood today. As a professional geologist at London's Natural History Museum, Fortey is well-qualified to tell this story. His writing skills have been widely acclaimed in earlier books such as Life: An Unauthorised Biography and Trilobite Eyewitness to Evolution. By giving the story a historical slant we can more readily understand how the present understanding of the earth story has been built up over the centuries and it introduces real people into the narrative. Consequently, the more technical aspects of present day earth science are rendered more palatable and understandable. The text is supported by a number of black and white diagrams and other pictures, which help illustrate some of the more complex processes and features of the earth. --Douglas Palmer.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
This book's a bore if you prefer science August 9, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Looking forward to reading a well received book on a fantastic subject matter, I was left struugling to find the will to live after page after page of tedious digression into irrelevant nonsense. Richard Fortey is clearly well read, well travelled and cultured but his digressions are only vaguely relevant. I can only think he might be a bit insecure and wants to bragg about how much he knows about stuff. Buy this if you are the guy who ends up listening to the monotonous nerd at parties, otherwise walk away. It is hard work.
A lost opportunity......., but great for insomnia March 30, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
There is no doubt that Richard Fortey is an expert in his field, with a genuine wish to convey his enthusiasm for geology to a wider audience. There is one major obstacle: his writing style is prolix and turgid (sorry, Fortey has got to me: I mean long-winded and boring). I gave up at page 61 after a discussion of the structure of basalt. I can only imagine that the HarperCollins editors were completely anaesthetised by the preceding pages to let this through. Any decent PhD supervisor would have put a blue pencil through this section and written "re-write!!" in the margin. Unnecessary and unexplained phrases abound. For example, on page 58 "Tiltometers .... monitor the heave on the ground .... to an accuracy of a tenth of a microradian. That is a very small tilt indeed." Radians are not defined by Fortey, but this is easily translated: 360 = 2pi radians, so 0.1 microradians is 5.7 microdegrees. But this doesn't mean anything either in practical terms, so why not just say "Tiltometers ... monitor the minutest heaves on the ground." One can't help feeling that Fortey sees himself in the role of High Priest explaining arcane mysteries. To my mind, that is out of touch with the times.
Worth the effort September 16, 2006 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
The compass of this book staggered my imagination. Not a breezy book and certainly not one to course through in a sitting. The places he chooses for geological description are diverse and representative of the complex processes shaping the surface of the earth. The material is not superficial, not at all "dumbed down." Ponderous? Restructing one's view of the cosmos ... if just only the idea of earth time ... perhaps not easily digestible. The author's comprehensive synthesis (and I did not say 'simplification')in his descriptions and historical overview of the growth of knowledge and some understanding of the various macro geological processes is enviable and refreshing at least. His language, I found, lubricates the reading process for a non-specialist like me.
Does the Earth move for you? March 31, 2006 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
In answer to a time-related statement from another, such as "I turn 57 next month", have you ever answered, "Rocks don't live that long"? In EARTH, British paleontologist-author Richard Fortey reminds the reader that the globe is theorized to be 4.5 billion years young, and the oldest rock datable by current technology, a zircon crystal from Australia, registers at 4.4 billion years. Is your mother-in-law that old? I've always been fascinated, when flying over or driving through the deserts of the western U.S., by the myriad of different rock formations unclothed by vegetation and naked for all to see. I've wished that I had a geologist by my side to explain how they came to be. Fortey may be the next best thing. In EARTH, the theme is "plate tectonics", and it's a tribute to the author's writing talent that he can make so esoteric a subject supremely interesting. The book is, at times, hard to put down. To illustrate the observable effects of past movements of the Earth's crust - movement that will continue long past the habitation of the Earth by the human species, Fortey has selected several spots on our world as exhibits: Pompei, Hawaii, the Swiss Alps, Newfoundland, Scotland, India, Kenya, California, and the Grand Canyon. The narrative is, of course, about the evolution of tectonic plate theory, but also about proto-continents, lost oceans, volcanoes, mountain ranges, upthrusts, downthrusts, subduction zones, deep ocean trenches, mid-ocean ranges, lava, basalt, granite, gneisses, fossils, fault lines, schists, nappes, magnetic fields, limestone, ice sheets, diamonds, gold, coral reefs, green sand, "hot spots", tin mines, magma, marble, polar wandering, rubies, tors, and a mule named "Buttercup". Fortey's gift is to make the mix wonderfully engaging for the average reader, though strict adherents to Creationism will likely see their beliefs threatened. Did you know, for example, that the Appalachians were once one end of a mountain chain that stretched across an ancient continent, and the remains of which, after continental drift, are now in such widely separated locales as Newfoundland, Ireland, Wales, Scotland and the length of western Scandinavia? Or that mid-European miners have long recognized the panicked streaming of cockroaches, which are extremely sensitive to changes in rock pressure, as the harbinger of impending rockfalls? The author occasionally waxes philosophic. After noting that a 1.5 billion-year old granite slab serves as the counter of a bar in London's Paddington Station, he muses: "If you have just missed your train, you can at least lean on a bar that is 1500 million years old and reflect that perhaps half an hour is not that serious a delay." I did, however, spot one egregious error in the narrative that is otherwise erudite and above reproach. On page 278, while recalling a trip through Nevada, he writes: "Carson City used to be the state capital. Now it is an endearingly ramshackle collection of wooden houses scattered over the hillside." Now, 'ang on a minute, guv. Carson City has been - and remains - the Nevada state capital. Moreover, it's situated in a broad valley at the foot of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, not spread over hills. Perhaps Fortey was thinking of Virginia City, made famous in the TV series "Bonanza", which is located a few miles away, is ramshackle, and is spread over hillsides. But Virginia City was never the state capital. Perhaps the most endearing chapter is the one in which Richard describes his ride on the back of a mule from the Grand Canyon's South Rim all the way to the bottom while, of course, gawking at the various strata of rock on the way down. Buttercup comes across as the stolid hero of the adventure. The EARTH paperback includes four sections of color photographs, plus other B&W snaps, maps, and drawings scattered throughout the text. It's a very user-friendly volume like Fortey's other book that I've read, LIFE. This book is an eminently readable work of popular science that should be required reading in high school geology. And I now have a deeper appreciation for the waivey-grained, black, white and grey boulders of granite - up to three tons in weight - that line our koi pond.
Excellent - well written, authoritative June 23, 2005 8 out of 12 found this review helpful
The is an excellent book which tells the geology of the earth using a number of specific examples from around the world. The narrative is wonderful - more of a story than a textbook.
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