Fr. 39.90

Earth in Flames - How an Asteroid Killed Dinosaurs How We Can Avoid a Similar Fate

English · Hardback

Will be released 15.07.2025

Description

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Earth in Flames discusses how the dinosaurs died, and how their deaths parallel what might happen to people after a nuclear war. The book reflects on the odds of future asteroid impacts, how to stop them, and what the readers personally and together can do to prevent a nuclear war, so that humans don't end up like the dinosaurs.

List of contents










  • Preface: How We Met and a Brief History

  • 1: Prologue

  • Part I Impacts, Asteroid Winters, and Dinosaurs

  • 2: The Power of Asteroids and Comets: When Will the Next Big One Hit?

  • 3: Clues from Craters, Assured Destruction, and Ejecta Layers

  • 4: Worldwide Fires Killed the Dinosaurs

  • 5: Can We Stop an Asteroid or Comet Collision in the Future?

  • Part II Humans and Nuclear Winter

  • 6: You Too Could Build a Bomb: It Can't Be Hard; There Are a Lot of Them

  • 7: How Many Bombs Are Out There, and How Could They Be Delivered?

  • 8: Scenarios for War and Near Misses

  • 9: Are You Being Targeted with a Nuclear Weapon?

  • 10: Assured Destruction by Nuclear Explosions

  • 11: Firestorms in Cities

  • 12: Climate Disaster, Climate Models, and Natural Analogs

  • 13: Impacts on Humans of Nuclear War

  • Part III Epilogue. Could It Happen?

  • 14: Will Humans Become Extinct from an Asteroid Collision or a Nuclear War?

  • 15: Can We Avoid Nuclear War?

  • Glossary

  • Acknowledgments

  • References

  • Index



About the author










Owen Brian Toon is a Professor in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He is a Fellow of the American Meteorological Society, the American Geophysical Union and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and winner of AGU's Roger Revelle Medal, and AMS's Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal. He was recognized by the United Nations Environmental Program for contributing to the U.N.'s 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for Climate Studies, and co-won the Future of Life Institute Award in 2022 for the discovery of Nuclear Winter.

Alan Robock is a Distinguished Professor of climate science in the Department of Environmental Sciences at Rutgers University. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in 1970 with a B.A. in Meteorology, and from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with an S.M. in 1974 and Ph.D. in 1977, both in Meteorology. Before graduate school, he

served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Philippines. He was a professor at the University of Maryland, 1977-1997, and the State Climatologist of Maryland, 1991-1997, before coming to Rutgers in 1998. Prof. Robock was a Lead Author of the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.


Summary

Earth in Flames discusses how the dinosaurs died, and how their deaths parallel what might happen to people after a nuclear war. The book reflects on the odds of future asteroid impacts, how to stop them, and what the readers personally and together can do to prevent a nuclear war, so that humans don't end up like the dinosaurs.

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