Download Ebook Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle
It's no any type of mistakes when others with their phone on their hand, as well as you're as well. The distinction may last on the material to open Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle When others open the phone for talking and also speaking all points, you could in some cases open and read the soft file of the Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle Obviously, it's unless your phone is offered. You could additionally make or wait in your laptop or computer that alleviates you to check out Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle.
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle
Download Ebook Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle
This is it guide Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle to be best seller recently. We offer you the most effective offer by getting the stunning book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle in this site. This Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle will not only be the kind of book that is difficult to discover. In this internet site, all types of books are offered. You can look title by title, writer by writer, as well as publisher by publisher to find out the very best book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle that you could check out now.
Why should be this e-book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle to read? You will never ever get the knowledge and also encounter without managing yourself there or attempting on your own to do it. Thus, reviewing this e-book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle is needed. You could be great as well as proper enough to obtain how essential is reading this Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle Even you constantly check out by obligation, you could sustain yourself to have reading book behavior. It will be so valuable and fun then.
Yet, just how is the way to obtain this publication Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle Still puzzled? It matters not. You could appreciate reviewing this book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle by on the internet or soft documents. Simply download the publication Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle in the link given to go to. You will obtain this Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle by online. After downloading and install, you could conserve the soft documents in your computer or gadget. So, it will ease you to read this e-book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle in particular time or area. It might be not certain to take pleasure in reviewing this e-book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle, since you have whole lots of task. But, with this soft data, you could take pleasure in reading in the extra time also in the voids of your jobs in workplace.
When a lot more, reviewing practice will constantly give beneficial perks for you. You may not require to spend sometimes to read guide Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle Merely reserved a number of times in our extra or downtimes while having dish or in your office to review. This Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle will reveal you brand-new thing that you could do now. It will certainly assist you to improve the quality of your life. Occasion it is merely a fun book Sea Change: A Message Of The Oceans, By Sylvia Earle, you could be healthier as well as a lot more fun to enjoy reading.
Internationally renowned as the ambassador-at-large to the world's oceans, Sylvia Earle is an extraordinary woman--the former chief scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, a distinguished marine biologist, a veteran of more than 6,000 hours underwater, the founder of an ocean engineering firm, and an eloquent advocate for marine conservation. Sea Change is at once the gripping adventure story of Earle's three decades of undersea exploration, an insider's introduction to the dynamic field of marine biology, and an urgent plea for the preservation of the world's fragile and rapidly deteriorating ocean ecosystems.
Earle takes us along on journeys to places of unimaginable beauty and unutterable destruction. She conjures up the exhilaration of swimming with humpback whales off the coast of Maui; she makes us comprehend the true environmental tragedy of the massive oil spills in Prince William Sound and the Persian Gulf; and she leads us out into Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the epitome of ocean wilderness but also the final resting place for tons of waste that drift in from thousands of miles away. This brilliant, thought-provoking, superbly readable book will inspire a new reverence for the majesty of the world's oceans even as it opens our eyes to the intricate interdependence of all life-forms.
- Sales Rank: #239930 in Books
- Brand: Ballantine Books
- Published on: 1996-05-21
- Released on: 1996-05-21
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.24" h x .82" w x 5.50" l, .95 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 361 pages
- Great product!
Amazon.com Review
What have we learned since 1951, when Rachel Carson's charming The Sea Around Us was published, winning so many hearts and the National Book Award? The sea below us, as pioneering marine biologist Sylvia Earle and others have demonstrated, churns with far more life than Carson ever dreamed. Sea Change is an enthusiastic celebration of that diversity and abundance. It's also a profoundly sobering account of the shortsighted human assault on ocean life. The "silent tide," as one reviewer wrote, may lie just offshore. Only a sea change in human habits and economies will save the oceans.
Like Carson, Earle carved a place for herself in the public imagination despite resistance from those in her male-dominated field. Her tales of underwater adventure--including many record-breaking dives among the 6,000 hours she has spent underwater--are punctuated by stories about her increasing prominence as an advocate for the oceans. She's seen it all, it seems: a year diving with whales in Hawaii, visits to Prince William Sound and the Persian Gulf in the aftermath of colossal oil spills, etc. Her breezy prose won't win her the National Book Award, but few others wear Rachel Carson's mantle as gracefully. That is reason enough to read Sea Change. --Pete Holloran
From Publishers Weekly
Marine biologist Earle discusses her own adventures and the history of ocean exploration, as well as current threats to the health of the oceans.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From the Publisher
"What Rachel Carson was to insecticides, birds, and our planet in 1962, Sylvia Earle, scientist, explorer, oceanographer, diver extraordinaire, entrepreneur, and eternal romantic, is now to the ocean."
--The Boston Globe
"A moving plea for the preservation of the oceans . . . An adventure story and a tribute to all creatures great and small. Tragically, it is a eulogy, a Rachel Carson-like warning of the silent tide inexorably approaching."
--The New York Times Book Review
"With contagious enthusiasm, Earle provides exciting accounts of her deep-sea explorations. . . . Earle gives vivid descriptions of the dramatic sea changes, and she urges readers to be more respectful toward the oceans--for our own sake, if nothing else."
--The Seattle Times
"Compelling and alarming . . . In Sea Change, Earle discusses her love for the sea and its still considerable mysteries in a personal voice that rhapsodizes the topic while also instructing us in many of its subtleties and complexities."
--San Diego Union-Tribune
"A landmark book of tremendous importance, Sea Change is a masterful blend of meticulous scientific investigation and incredible adventure. Earle's prose is magnificent, her story utterly compelling. It conveys an urgent call to action, an appeal to every one of us who cares about the ocean world on which we are all, ultimately, dependent. After reading this book--and read it you must--you will never be quite the same."
--Dr. Jane Goodall
"A fascinating book--which is also an urgent warning about the damage we are doing to the global environment. Let us hope the world will listen to Earle's SOS--Save Our Seas--before it is too late.
--Arthur C. Clarke, CBE
"Sea Change sounds an alarm and offers hope. No one is better qualified than Sylvia Earle to give us this assessment of the greatest element of our biosphere."
--Hugh Downs
"An insightful account of the changes Earle has witnessed over the last several decades. Her almost spiritual respect for her subject is evident in her awe-filled writing. . . . At the last, she offers a blueprint for change, with suggestions for guaranteeing the survival of our seas. A must for anyone who shares her deep respect for the life and health of our planet."
--NAPRA ReVIEW
"Unlike most people, Ms. Earle has seen nature in its most pristine state, before humans--the newcomers to this environment--have had a chance to interfere. She has seen the alarming consequences of exploitation and greed, and writes of them with a mix of scientific objectivity and a naturalist's passion."
--Baltimore Sun
Most helpful customer reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
The history and science of oceanography
By A Customer
Much of this book is written in the first person, which in places makes it very appealing, but in other places is distracting. My other gripe is that she jumps around a bit in her life time - so one chapter she talks about being the only woman on an expedition, and then she is the 1990's leader of NOAA and then we are back to her childhood haunts and back again.
That being said, it is a good read, full of facts and history. She worked in the sciences back when women were uncommon in the field. Back when there was no scuba gear and Jacques Cousteau was in to spear fishing, not conservation. Interesting stories, indeed! So, if you want an account of oceanography, past and present, its extreme limits and cool equipment from a personal point of view, pick this one up.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Incredible! A true visit to the real world of the oceans.
By A Customer
An inspiring story on the world of marine science. Sea Change takes you to the roots marine studies, and shows the rise of a marine biologist from a girl at the beach to a woman with a submarine. Anyone even faintly interested in the environment in general will love this book and it's hands on experiences with the world. Sea Change gives life lessons, and shows the real world of the sea, not the usual fairy tale of unbounding resources and perfect harmony. For the true marine fan, this book can serve as a novel as well as a learning experience. This is a delightful book that is easy to read and secretly educational. It enriches the mind while painting the imagination. I would reccomend this book to anyone willing to hear me out.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
A great tale of the ocean's wonders
By A Customer
Sylvia Earle's Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans serves as a clarion call to humans to take a closer look at the life blood of planet earth, the oceans. The thoughtful mixture of wonder and concern outlines Earle's years of study and thousands of hours working, playing and living beneath the ocean's surface. Tales of discovery and enlightenment are interspersed with easy to read discussions of geology, biology, engineering, law and policy, to weave a tale advocating better stewardship of our ocean resources.
A biologist by formal training and an explorer and adventurer by natural curiosity, Earle reminds us of what we learned (but may have never fully grasped) in elementary school, that the planet which we inhabit is covered mostly in water.
Earle begins by providing the reader first with a sense of geologic time over which the earth has taken shape and the oceans have formed. She points out that post-Columbus man has occupied this planet for a mere four seconds in the geologic year representing the earth's 4.6 billion year history. She notes modern oceanography, from its origin in the 1870s with the expedition of the HMS Challenger, covers less than one second on that time scale.
Having humbled human knowledge of the seas on a temporal scale, Earle assuages our species ego touting the great advancements that have enabled humans to descend, albeit briefly, to the very deepest part of the oceans. She revels in the fact that she grew up in an era that saw Cousteau and Gagnan develop self contained underwater breathing apparatus (scuba) equipment. Divers, unfettered from the bulky diving helmets and shackled air hoses, could now have significantly greater access to, "where most of the living action on Earth is concentrated: underwater." She relishes the
milestone achieved when U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh and Swiss engineer Jacques Picard descended in the bathysphere Trieste to a depth of 35,800 feet in the Marianas Trench. The visit to the deepest point in the ocean in 1960 in many ways the out paced the ascent of Mt. Everest.
The author recounts her own fascination and relationship with the sea from her days as a child on the coasts of New Jersey and Florida to her study of marine flora in the Gulf of Mexico as a graduate student. In self-deprecating style, Earle outlines the series of circumstances that led from her participation in an otherwise all male oceanographic expedition in 1964 to an underwater living experiment in 1970 "manned" by an all-women research team.
As her curiosity grew and technological development allowed, Earle began venturing into those depths and activities that had not yet hosted human activities, including early observations of humpback whales off the coast of Hawaii to the exploration of 1250 foot depths in an untethered specially designed diving suit. Each adventure strengthened her conviction that the ocean as a living system merited further research to increase human understanding of its beauty and importance in the biosphere .
Earle's sense of wonder and desire to further scientific observation led her to co-found Deep Ocean Engineering, Inc., a designer and manufacturer of deep sea remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) and manned submersibles. Balancing the limits of the human body and the desire for feasible access to the ocean depths, Earle notes that while economics and human frailty may favor ROV's, "there is no completely satisfactory substitute for being there." Further, engineer Earle notes that while her own business venture is successful in making inroads to deep sea exploration, the United States lags behind other nations in developing a national policy toward ocean exploration which includes technological development of vehicles capable of plumbing the deepest ocean's depths. She illustrates her point in recounting her opportunity to descend more than two and one half miles, not in one of her own creations or one sponsored by the US, but in a Japanese submersible.
In the second part of her book, Dr. Earle outlines the results of unbridled technology on the ocean and its resources. Fisheries, once thought inexhaustible have been decimated by commercial ventures, "ever reaping, never sowing." Earle notes that the world's ocean resources suffer a tragedy of the commons of global proportions, wherein the lack of enforceable rights to resources leads to a mindless grab for what can be taken today.
She laments the effects of the well meant, but perhaps ill-implemented Magnuson Fishery and Conservation Management Act. While the goals of the Act are laudable, she notes, the establishment of Regional Fishery Councils controlled to a large degree by commercial fishing interests is akin to letting the "barracuda guard[] the fish coop." While the Act allowed the United States to control fishing access in its 200 mile Exclusive Economic Zone, it merely drove out foreign fishing and replaced it with an overcapitalized domestic fishing industry.
Earle also notes that scientists and policy makers have addressed the problem of overfishing with naive or weak analytical methods. Scientist Earle very succinctly questions the credibility of maximum sustainable yield (MSY) estimates of fish stocks, given the multiple and uncertain factors necessary to determine such an estimate. Such "scientific" methods may in fact do more harm than good, contends Earle, "the concept of MSY snares good minds, creates unrealistic expectations and encourages the setting of unattainable goals." She also paints a picture of myopic policies which have resulted in problems of bycatch of non-targeted fish, marine mammals, turtles and birds. The original goals of the MFCMA, asserts Earle, have been undermined by practices which have led to, "a squandering of natural assets deliberately encouraged by national policies." She does note that some of these problems are slowly being addressed. Congress, federal agencies and fishery councils are developing new methods such as individual fishing quotas (IFQs) and individual transferable quotas (ITQs) which may achieve a better success in conserving our ocean resource capital. And policy makers are shifting their population analyses away from MSY concepts.
Earle also paints a picture of the "coral bleaching" of tropical reefs. Slight variations in ocean temperatures have dramatic effects. Wide expanses of reefs once alive and vibrant in color are now dying and leaving behind expansive white coral corpses.
The decline of fish stocks and the death of coral communities are detrimental not only in their short term loss, but also in the long term role they play in the web of life. "Each species is a part of a planetary insurance policy for maintaining gradual, not cataclysmic, adjustments to changing environmental circumstances." Earle examines the far reaching effects of human activity on marine life. Toxins disposed of in the water infiltrate the marine food chain. Fish, polar bears, whales and penguins who have never directly encountered species homo sapien suffer increased levels of toxins in their organs and tissues. While ocean disposal may appear attractive to our species it is by no means. Highly persistent plastics and other wastes dumped at sea have led to a an alarming, but common, post- mortem determination of many forms of sea life: "death by debris." The casualties included an estimated 50,000 North Pacific Fur seals yearly in the 1980s. These more obvious concerns have led to international laws banning or restricting ocean dumping of certain wastes.
Earle rounds out her discussion of man-made threats to the ocean environment with eyewitness accounts of the Exxon Valdez spill and the act of environmental terrorism perpetrated by Saddam Hussein in the Persian Gulf. The former disaster affected some of the world's most pristine coastline, a stretch the size of California's shore. The latter spill was an intentional dumping of the equivalent of 50 Valdez spills.
In the final part of her book,
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle PDF
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle EPub
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle Doc
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle iBooks
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle rtf
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle Mobipocket
Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans, by Sylvia Earle Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar