Historical Perspectives on Climate ChangeOxford University Press, 14 jul 2005 - 208 páginas This intriguing volume provides a thorough examination of the historical roots of global climate change as a field of inquiry, from the Enlightenment to the late twentieth century. Based on primary and archival sources, the book is filled with interesting perspectives on what people have understood, experienced, and feared about the climate and its changes in the past. Chapters explore climate and culture in Enlightenment thought; climate debates in early America; the development of international networks of observation; the scientific transformation of climate discourse; and early contributions to understanding terrestrial temperature changes, infrared radiation, and the carbon dioxide theory of climate. But perhaps most important, this book shows what a study of the past has to offer the interdisciplinary investigation of current environmental problems. |
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... and index. ISBN 0195189736 1. Climatic changes—Europe—History. 2. Climatic changes—United States—History. 3. Global environmental change—History. I. Title. QC981.8.C5F45 1998 306.4′5—DC21 9722545 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Printed in.
... and index. ISBN 0195189736 1. Climatic changes—Europe—History. 2. Climatic changes—United States—History. 3. Global environmental change—History. I. Title. QC981.8.C5F45 1998 306.4′5—DC21 9722545 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Printed in.
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... Europe and to the accounts of early explorers and settlers in the New World. The study quickly branched into the development of international networks of observation, the scientific transformation of climate discourse, and early ...
... Europe and to the accounts of early explorers and settlers in the New World. The study quickly branched into the development of international networks of observation, the scientific transformation of climate discourse, and early ...
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... European continent. Settlers in the New World engaged in selfconscious, if ineffective, efforts to modify and “improve” the climate through clearing the forests and cultivating the lands. At the turn of the ... Europe had moderated since.
... European continent. Settlers in the New World engaged in selfconscious, if ineffective, efforts to modify and “improve” the climate through clearing the forests and cultivating the lands. At the turn of the ... Europe had moderated since.
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James Rodger Fleming. Bos believed that the climate of Europe had moderated since Roman times due to the gradual clearing of the forests and the spread of cultivation, and that vast cultural displacements had resulted. The American ...
James Rodger Fleming. Bos believed that the climate of Europe had moderated since Roman times due to the gradual clearing of the forests and the spread of cultivation, and that vast cultural displacements had resulted. The American ...
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... European thought linking climate change and culture can be traced to the diplomat, historian, and critic Abbé JeanBaptiste Du Bos, member of the French Academy (later perpetual secretary), and author of Réflexions critiques sur la ...
... European thought linking climate change and culture can be traced to the diplomat, historian, and critic Abbé JeanBaptiste Du Bos, member of the French Academy (later perpetual secretary), and author of Réflexions critiques sur la ...
Índice
The Expansion of Observing Systems | |
Climate Discourse Transformed | |
Joseph Fouriers Theory of Terrestrial Temperatures | |
John Tyndall Svante Arrhenius and Early Research on Carbon Dioxide and Climate | |
T C Chamberlin and the Geological Agency of the Atmosphere | |
The Climatic Determinism of Ellsworth Huntington | |
Global Warming? The Early Twentieth Century | |
Historical Dimensions | |
Notes | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
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Términos y frases comunes
absorb absorption Amer American Philosophical Society Archives Arrhenius’s atmospheric CO2 Bibliography carbon cycle carbon dioxide carbonic acid caused century chaleur Charles cited civilization climate change climatology CO2 concentration cold cooling cultivation cultural early Earth Earth’s orbital Earth’s surface Ellsworth Huntington environmental essay Europe experiments forests G. S. Callendar gases Geographical geological geologist Geophysical glacial global change global warming greenhouse effect History Högbom human Huntington Papers Ibid ice ages increase infrared Institution JeanBaptiste John Tyndall Joseph Fourier latitudes London Meteorol meteorological observations Meteorological Society Montesquieu National Observatory ocean Paris Philos physics published radiant heat radiation radiative records rise Roger Revelle Royal Society Science scientific scientists solar Suess Svante Arrhenius T. C. Chamberlin Tellus terrestrial temperatures theory of climate Thomas Jefferson thought Trans Tyndall Collection Tyndall’s United University Press variations vols Washington water vapor weather William winter World Yale York