Vendor | |
---|---|
Fletcher Agency
Melissa Chinchillo |
|
Original language | |
English | |
Categories | |
SYMPHONY IN C
Carbon and The Evolution Of (Almost) Everything
Carbon is everywhere. It’s with us from beginning to end, present in our baby clothes and coffin alike. We live on a carbon planet, and we are carbon life. No other element is so central to our well-being; yet, when missing or misaligned, carbon atoms can also bring about disease and even death. Carbon holds the answers to some of humanity’s biggest questions. Where did Earth come from? What will ultimately become of it―and of us? With poetic storytelling, earth scientist Robert M. Hazen explores the universe to discover the past, present, and future of life’s most essential element.
We’re not only “made of star stuff,” as Carl Sagan famously observed, but “Big Bang stuff,” too. Hazen reveals that carbon’s grand symphony began with a frenzied prelude shortly after the dawn of creation, bringing new attention to the tiny number of Big Bang–created carbon atoms that often get overlooked. In minutes, violently colliding protons and neutrons improbably formed the first carbon atoms, which can still be found within our bodies. His book then unfolds in four movements, building momentum as he explores carbon as the element of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water.
He visits the famed volcanic crater Solfatara di Pozzuoli near Naples, where venting carbon dioxide and other noxious fumes condense into beautiful crystals. He climbs the cliffs of the Scottish Highlands and delves deep into the precious-metal mines of Namibia, journeying toward Earth’s mysterious core in search of undocumented carbon structures. Hazen often asks us to pause and consider carbon’s role in climate change and what we can do about it, for our lives and this element are inextricably intertwined. With prose that sparkles like a diamond, Symphony in C tells the story of carbon, in which we all have a part.
Robert Hazenis executive director of the Deep Carbon Observatory based at the Carnegie Institution’s Geophysical Laboratory and the Clarence Robinson Professor of Earth Science at George Mason University. He lives in Bethesda, Maryland.
Available products |
---|
Book
Published 2019-06-01 by Norton |