Glacier: Nature and Culture

Author:   Peter G. Knight
Publisher:   Reaktion Books
ISBN:  

9781789141344


Pages:   248
Publication Date:   14 October 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Glacier: Nature and Culture


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Author:   Peter G. Knight
Publisher:   Reaktion Books
Imprint:   Reaktion Books
ISBN:  

9781789141344


ISBN 10:   1789141346
Pages:   248
Publication Date:   14 October 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

Knight (Keele Univ.) takes an interdisciplinary view of glaciers, drawing on both science and the humanities. [...] The book is heavily illustrated with breathtaking photographs... -- Choice Among the many victims of climate change are glaciers. The huge bodies of dense ice that form on land and are constantly moving from the force of their own weight no longer cover as much of Earth's surface as they once did. In Glacier, geographer Knight discusses not only the science of glaciers but also their importance and influence on the environment, weather, and even art and culture. Featuring more than 100 illustrations, Glacier pays homage to one of Earth's most majestic, yet fragile, features. -- Physics Today


Among the many victims of climate change are glaciers. The huge bodies of dense ice that form on land and are constantly moving from the force of their own weight no longer cover as much of Earth's surface as they once did. In Glacier, geographer Knight discusses not only the science of glaciers but also their importance and influence on the environment, weather, and even art and culture. Featuring more than 100 illustrations, Glacier pays homage to one of Earth's most majestic, yet fragile, features. --Physics Today


As I was reading this book I thought to myself how easy it was to read, and how well the concepts of glaciers, glaciation, and glacial processes were explained. . . . Covering both physical and human activities, the book examines how glaciers form and function, but also how humans relate to glaciers. . . . This entertaining book covers our interaction with glaciers from economics to art, poetry and song. . . . The use of good illustrations throughout make this book even more enjoyable to flick through as well as read in depth. This book will make a great gift but it also belongs on all geologists' bookshelves, to remind us all of how intertwined nature and people always are. -- Geoscientist Knight covers vast swaths of territory with this book, from a careful examination of the development of glaciology, to thoughtful critiques of art and literature inspired by and focusing upon glaciers. He explores their role in ecology and economics. He dives deeply into the millions of years of natural history behind glaciers, and ponders their future. His text is accompanied by over one hundred illustrations, including many from Alaska. And his writing is lyrical. Whether the reader has never visited a glacier or has devoted their life to exploring them, they will find new perspectives and appreciations for these behemoth rivers of ice in this book. 'In glaciers, ' Knight writes, 'we recognize nature's fragility, complexity, majesty, ephemerality, vastness, beauty, terror: in glaciers we see the sublime.' -- Anchorage Daily News This beautifully illustrated book, written with panache and clarity, is based on high quality research and gives a perfect introduction to the science, history, significance, and beauty of the world's glaciers. --Andrew Goudie, emeritus professor of geography, University of Oxford The volume is lavishly illustrated by many color images of glaciers and ice fields from around the world, including several satellite images. Knight thoughtfully documents the past and present importance of the cryosphere on our landscapes, but he also is at pains to include the events of the last two decades or so and the possible impact that the rapid changes in glaciers and ice sheets will have on communities that rely on them for water or power and also on coastal areas that might be impacted by rising relative sea level. . . . In broadening the vision of glaciers, Knight has contributed a series of chapters that can be enjoyed at a variety of levels and by a wide range of readers. -- Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research An interdisciplinary view of glaciers, drawing on both science and the humanities. . . . The book is heavily illustrated with breathtaking photographs . . . [Provides] a window into how people in recent centuries perceived glaciers, as shown through works of art (including music and literature), and how geographic expeditions contributed to perceptions even into the present day. . . . Recommended. -- Choice Among the many victims of climate change are glaciers. The huge bodies of dense ice that form on land and are constantly moving from the force of their own weight no longer cover as much of Earth's surface as they once did. In Glacier, geographer Knight discusses not only the science of glaciers but also their importance and influence on the environment, weather, and even art and culture. Featuring more than 100 illustrations, Glacier pays homage to one of Earth's most majestic, yet fragile, features. -- Physics Today Marcel Proust in In Search of Lost Time wrote that the only true path of discovery is . . . not to explore new places, but to see a hundred universes with your eyes, with the eyes of hundreds of other people. And this book looks at glaciers not only through the eyes of scientists, but also . . . travelers, politicians, artists, poets, and storytellers. -- Ice and Snow (Russia) Glacier takes readers on a journey through both the material and the metaphorical dimensions of ice--with scientists and songwriters, poets and holiday hikers, from nineteenth-century debates about Ice Ages to twenty-first-century art exhibits and debates about climate change. This book is perfect for anyone captivated by mountain glaciers and curious about people's long-standing relationships with ice. --Mark Carey, author of In the Shadow of Melting Glaciers: Climate Change and Andean Society In Glacier, Knight highlights not just the magnificence of glaciers and their historical significance, but also the dangers we are facing with climate change. . . . A message to us all to act before they are lost forever. -- The Pilgrim


Among the many victims of climate change are glaciers. The huge bodies of dense ice that form on land and are constantly moving from the force of their own weight no longer cover as much of Earth's surface as they once did. In Glacier, geographer Knight discusses not only the science of glaciers but also their importance and influence on the environment, weather, and even art and culture. Featuring more than 100 illustrations, Glacier pays homage to one of Earth's most majestic, yet fragile, features. -- Physics Today


An interdisciplinary view of glaciers, drawing on both science and the humanities. . . . The book is heavily illustrated with breathtaking photographs . . . [Provides] a window into how people in recent centuries perceived glaciers, as shown through works of art (including music and literature), and how geographic expeditions contributed to perceptions even into the present day. . . . Recommended. -- Choice Among the many victims of climate change are glaciers. The huge bodies of dense ice that form on land and are constantly moving from the force of their own weight no longer cover as much of Earth's surface as they once did. In Glacier, geographer Knight discusses not only the science of glaciers but also their importance and influence on the environment, weather, and even art and culture. Featuring more than 100 illustrations, Glacier pays homage to one of Earth's most majestic, yet fragile, features. -- Physics Today


Author Information

Peter G. Knight is Reader in Geography at Keele University and his research on glaciers has been published in the leading international journals. His previous books include Glaciers (1999) and Glacier Science and Environmental Change (2006). He lives in Whitchurch, UK.

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