Newsflash

Greenland and parts of Antarctica are losing large volumes of ice to the oceans as their glaciers get thinner, a Nasa satellite has revealed. All of the glaciers that are changing rapidly are ones that flow into the sea. "The fact that they end in the sea means a buoyancy effect is working on them. As glaciers thin, they float better, and with less frictions, they slide into the sea faster. As glaciers thin, they reach a Tipping Point, and flow to the sea faster than they build up. source
 

The 2050 Project Mission Statement

The mission of The 2050 Project is to provide accurate, useful, long-range forecasts and information about the future of the planet.  Our favored forecast interval is to 2050 and beyond, because we believe that shorter-range forecasts cannot portray the magnitude of our impending problems, and thus can only guide half-steps toward solution.

2050 Project Information

Loading...
Polls
Developed countries will begin restricting reproduction in the year ....
 
What's your biggest fear about global warming?
 
Syndicate
Home arrow All News Items List arrow Climate arrow Climate book is judges' hot pick
Climate book is judges' hot pick PDF Print E-mail
Written by BBC News   
Sunday, 22 June 2008

A book about global warming has won this year's Royal Society prize for popular science writing.

Mark Lynas' Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet has already been turned into a TV programme and is now almost certain to experience a jump in sales. The book explains how Earth will change for every degree rise in temperature - from droughts to mass extinctions.

 
Six degrees book cover (Fourth Estate)
National Geographic has produced a film based on the book

Mr Lynas was presented with the winner's £10,000 cheque at a ceremony hosted by the UK academy of science.

The award is one of the major publishing events of the year in the UK. Previous winners have included Bill Bryson, Stephen J Gould, Roger Penrose, and Stephen Hawking.

Six Degrees uses published scientific data and interviews with leading researchers to illustrate the changes we could witness in a warmer world.

Professor Jonathan Ashmore, the chair of the judges, described the book as "compelling and gripping".

"It presents a series of scientifically plausible, worst-case scenarios without tipping into hysteria," he said.

"Six Degrees is not just a great read, written in an original way, but also provides a good overview of the latest science on this highly topical issue.

"This is a book that will stimulate debate and that will, Lynas hopes, move us to action in the hope that this is a disaster movie that never happens. Everyone should read this book."

The bookies' favourite had been A Life Decoded, the autobiography of genetics pioneer Craig Venter.

The six books shortlisted for the Royal Society's General Prize were:

  • A Life Decoded, by J Craig Venter (Penguin Allen Lane)

     

  • Coral: A Pessimist in Paradise, by Steve Jones (Little, Brown)

     

  • Gut Feelings by Gerd Gigerenzer (Penguin - Allen Lane)

     

  • Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet, by Mark Lynas (Fourth Estate)

     

  • The Sun Kings, by Stuart Clark (Princeton University Press)

     

  • Why Beauty is Truth, by Ian Stewart (Basic Books)

    The Big Book of Science Things to Make and Do, written by Rebecca Gilpin and Leonie Pratt and designed and illustrated by Josephine Thompson, won in the junior science books category.

  • source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7457317.stm
     
    < Prev   Next >
    Archive