Our Affair with El Nino: How We Transformed an Enchanting Peruvian Current Into a Global Climate Hazard

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Princeton University Press, 7 may 2006 - 288 páginas

Until 1997, few people had heard of the seasonal current that Peruvians nicknamed El Niño. But when meteorologists linked it to devastating floods in California, severe droughts in Indonesia, and strange weather everywhere, its name became entrenched in the common parlance faster than a typhoon making landfall. Bumper stickers appeared bearing the phrase "Don't blame me; blame El Niño." Stockbrokers muttered "El Niño" when the market became erratic.


What's behind this fascinating natural phenomenon, and how did our perceptions of it change? In this captivating book, renowned oceanographer George Philander engages readers in lucid and stimulating discussions of the scientific, political, economic and cultural developments that shaped our perceptions of this force of nature.


The book begins by outlining the history of El Niño, an innocuous current that appears off the coast of Peru around Christmastime--its name refers to the Child Jesus--and originally was welcomed as a blessing. It goes on to explore how our perceptions of El Niño were transformed, not because the phenomenon changed, but because we did. Philander argues persuasively that familiarity with the different facets of our affair with El Niño--our wealth of experience in dealing with natural hazards such as severe storms and prolonged droughts--can help us cope with an urgent and controversial environmental problem of our own making--global warming.


Intellectually invigorating and a joy to read, Our Affair with El Niño is an important contribution to the debate about the relationship between scientific knowledge and public affairs.

Dentro del libro

Índice

A Mercurial Character
11
A Fallen Angel?
28
A Construct of Ours
34
A Matchmaker
40
Two Incompatible Cultures
65
Small Science versus Big Science
81
The Perspective of a Painter
93
The Perspective of a Poet
118
Predicting the Weather
169
Investigating the Atmospheric Circulation
177
Exploring the Oceans
189
Reconciling Divergent Perspectives on El Niño
213
Taking a LongTerm Geological View
227
Famines in India
237
Droughts in Zimbabwe
244
Becoming Custodians of Planet Earth
251

The Perspective of a Musician
129
A Marriage of the Hard and Soft Sciences
139
The Cloud
151
NOTES AND REFERENCES
259
INDEX
273
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Sobre el autor (2006)

George Philander is Knox Taylor Professor of Geosciences (Meteorology) at Princeton University. He is the author of Is the Temperature Rising: The Uncertain Science of Global Warming (Princeton).

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