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Thomas Halliday (1)

Autor/a de Otherlands: A World in the Making

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1 obres 487 Membres 18 Ressenyes

Obres de Thomas Halliday

Otherlands: A World in the Making (2022) 487 exemplars

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I was captivated both by the premise, and the actual telling of the earth's story. Halliday takes us into each succeeding geological era by focussing on a particular part of the world that is best able to illustrate his story. He paints a picture of the its life and times, telling us about the weather and over-riding climatic conditions, the animal and plant life he observes. It's all very real. My only problem is that this book isn't lavishly illustrated - I appreciate this would have put the price up - so I resorted to reading with my phone by my side, in order to look up the creatures whom he named and described. This book is so densely packed with information that I found I had to limit myself to just a couple of chapters a day (they're fairly short - 15 pages or so) to allow my poor brain the space to absorb everything. The book is crammed with 'Ooh I didn't know that' facts which I delighted in sharing. Here's one: 'More time has passed between the lives of the last Diplodocus and the first Tyrannosaurus than passed between that of the last Tyrannosaurus and your birth' Well, who knew?… (més)
 
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Margaret09 | Hi ha 17 ressenyes més | Apr 15, 2024 |
Indeholder "List of Maps", "Table of Eras", "Introduction: The House of Millions of Years", "1. Thaw: Northern Plain, Alaska, USA - Pleistocene", "2. Origins: Kanapoi, Kenya - Pliocene", "3. Deluge: Gargano, Italy - Miocene", "4. Homeland: Tinguiririca, Chile - Oligocene", "5. Cycles: Seymour Island, Antarctica - Eocene", "6. Rebirth: Hell Creek, Montana, USA - Paleocene", "7. Signals: Yixian, Liaoning, China - Cretaceous", "8. Foundation: Swabia, Germany - Jurassic", "9. Contingency: Madygen, Kyrgyzstan - Triassic", "10. Seasons: Moradi, Niger - Permian", "11. Fuel: Mazon Creek, Illinois, USA - Carboniferous", "12. Collaboration: Rhynie, Scotland, UK - Devonian", "13. Depths: Yaman-Kasy Russia - Silurian", "14. Transformation: Soom, South Africa - Ordovician", "15. Consumers: Chengjiang, Yunnan, China - Cambrian", "16. Emergence: Ediacara Hills, Australia - Ediacaran", "Epilogue: A Town Called Hope", "Notes", "Acknowledgements", "Permissions", "Index".

"List of Maps" handler om ???
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"Introduction: The House of Millions of Years" handler om ???
"1. Thaw: Northern Plain, Alaska, USA - Pleistocene" handler om ???
"2. Origins: Kanapoi, Kenya - Pliocene" handler om ???
"3. Deluge: Gargano, Italy - Miocene" handler om ???
"4. Homeland: Tinguiririca, Chile - Oligocene" handler om ???
"5. Cycles: Seymour Island, Antarctica - Eocene" handler om ???
"6. Rebirth: Hell Creek, Montana, USA - Paleocene" handler om ???
"7. Signals: Yixian, Liaoning, China - Cretaceous" handler om ???
"8. Foundation: Swabia, Germany - Jurassic" handler om ???
"9. Contingency: Madygen, Kyrgyzstan - Triassic" handler om ???
"10. Seasons: Moradi, Niger - Permian" handler om ???
"11. Fuel: Mazon Creek, Illinois, USA - Carboniferous" handler om ???
"12. Collaboration: Rhynie, Scotland, UK - Devonian" handler om ???
"13. Depths: Yaman-Kasy Russia - Silurian" handler om ???
"14. Transformation: Soom, South Africa - Ordovician" handler om ???
"15. Consumers: Chengjiang, Yunnan, China - Cambrian" handler om ???
"16. Emergence: Ediacara Hills, Australia - Ediacaran" handler om ???
"Epilogue: A Town Called Hope" handler om ???
"Notes" handler om ???
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… (més)
 
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bnielsen | Hi ha 17 ressenyes més | Dec 24, 2023 |
I have mixed feelings about this - there's so much to this that's fascinating but it runs up against my own personal limits of visualisation. It's a *very* visual book, each chapter focused on a single scene, describing the geography and geology of an area and the appearance and behaviour of a set of species. For me I just found it incredibly hard to picture much of what's being described. When mentioning an animal, I pretty much always instantly searched for a reconstruction - and almost always what I'd pictured from his description was significantly different. Especially the further back you go, things are so different! With the geography I was completely lost at sea and had to settle for accepting I was only getting broad impressions, even though often the descriptions were quite beautiful. It feels like a book written to be lavishly illustrated, full of diagrams. I finished it desperately wanting that book!

If you can accept that you're not going to get a perfect handle of the specifics and you'll be regularly looking up cool sounding animals and plants, there is a lot to fascinate you here. He really does show the past eras as alien worlds, more impressive than anything out of sci fi, yet still evoking a feeling of connectedness. Even in the pre cambrian, reading about weird primitive circles vaguely drifting through the microbial mat of the ocean floor, there's still a part of me that felt tender towards them, across 600 million years. The variety of animal life and the way it's distinctively connected to climate conditions is well illustrated. There's tons of fascinating details - one that struck me was logs being able to be floating ecosystems for decades in the Jurassic because there were no wood boring sea predators like shipworm to destroy them prematurely. The glass sponge reefs which covered 7000km of sea were incredible to me too - "at three times the length of the Great Barrier Reef, these silicon constructions are the largest biological structures ever to have existed" As with many books about the natural world, there's too much amazing stuff to keep in my head and due to my first point it was often a bit of a slog getting through it, but it definitely opened my eyes again to the sheer wonder of natural history and all the unbelievable, incredible things life has done.

It ends with an epilogue about climate change with a mild degree of hope but mostly urgency, obviously. It fits in given how much the book has talked about climate and geological changes (and occasionally the negative results of life finding a new resource) with their impacts on what life can actually exist - particularly notable of course things like the Permian extinction event. Near the end he quotes Ozymandias by Horace Smith:

"We wonder — and some Hunter may express
Wonder like ours, when thro' the wilderness
Where London stood, holding the Wolf in chace,
He meets some fragment huge, and stops to guess
What powerful but unrecorded race
Once dwelt in that annihilated place."
… (més)
 
Marcat
tombomp | Hi ha 17 ressenyes més | Oct 31, 2023 |

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Obres
1
Membres
487
Popularitat
#50,715
Valoració
4.1
Ressenyes
18
ISBN
19
Llengües
4

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