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Saving the World - by Brett M Bennett & Gregory A Barton Hardcover
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Highlights
- An illuminating history of the forgotten concept of climatic botany that underscores how vital forests are to our future.
- About the Author: Brett M. Bennett is associate professor of history at Western Sydney University, Australia, and the University of Johannesburg, South Africa.
- 256 Pages
- Nature, Ecology
Description
Book Synopsis
An illuminating history of the forgotten concept of climatic botany that underscores how vital forests are to our future.
Saving the World tells the forgotten history of climatic botany, the idea that forests are essential for creating and recycling rain. Long before the specter of global warming, societies recognized that deforestation caused drastic climate shifts--as early as 1770, concerns over deforestation spurred legislation to combat human-induced climate change. Across the twentieth century, climatic botany experienced fluctuating fortunes, influenced by technological advancements and evolving meteorological theories. Remarkably, contemporary scientists are rediscovering the crucial role of forests in rainfall recycling, unaware of the long history of climatic botany. This enlightening book is essential reading for anyone passionate about conserving the world's forests and preserving our climate for future generations.
Review Quotes
"Bennett and Barton present a detailed history of the roots of climatic botany and the underlying scientific philosophies that form our modern understanding of this discipline. In examples that extend over hundreds of years and across cultures and continents, they present a scientific and environmental history of the movement to regulate climate using forests. They argue a 'supply-side' perspective of forest hydrology as a key component to climate change policy and mitigation efforts, including supporting reforestation and forest restoration. There is much still to learn about how the water evaporated from plants influences climate at global and regional scales. This history is an ideal text for a seminar or discussion examining global change biology or climate change policy, or as a thought-provoking read for a general audience. Recommended."-- "Choice"
"A historical approach to the ideas behind climate change, with a particular focus on the role of trees. . . . If the development of scientific thought interests you, there's plenty of food for thought here on a subject that couldn't be more topical."-- "Arbuturian"
"Climate change and environmental crises are now at the centre of global concern. Bennett and Barton vividly demonstrate that the ideas underlying present anxieties have a deep and multi-faceted history. We need to know about these past debates: they are fascinating and they remain influential today. This book, ranging widely from forests to deserts, and from Mauritius, via India, to North America is an excellent place to start."--William Beinart, emeritus professor, St Antony's College, University of Oxford
"This is an extraordinary book, telling the compelling, yet thus far, neglected story of the rise, fall and revival of climatic botany. Bennett and Barton, drawing on extensive archival research, have woven together an enthralling environmental history of climatic botany, stretching from its early modern origins through expansive European empires to present-day scientific frameworks. It is a must-read for those interested in forest, empire and climate change histories."--Paul Munro, Scientia Associate Professor in Human Geography, University of New South Wales, and author of "Colonial Seeds in African Soil"
"Saving the World . . . details the ways in which eighteenth-century initiatives against deforestation, motivated by the belief that forests recycled rain, advanced humanity's understanding of how human actions affect climate."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"You might imagine no one worried much about human impacts on the climate (particularly through deforestation) before the last thirty years. Not so! This elegant and meticulously researched history excavates a fascinating record of investigations into those critical themes, traversing effortlessly from the USA and Europe to India, Africa and South America. In so doing, it provides a timely and significant reflection on contemporary discussions about both the science and the politics of climate change."--Sir Jonathon Porritt, cofounder of Forum for the Future and author of "Hope in Hell: A Decade to Confront the Climate Emergency"
About the Author
Brett M. Bennett is associate professor of history at Western Sydney University, Australia, and the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. His books include Plantations and Protected Areas: A Global History of Forest Management. Gregory A. Barton is professor of history at Western Sydney University, Australia, and the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. His books include The Global History of Organic Farming.