Browse Results

Showing 27,401 through 27,425 of 31,239 results

How to Cool the Planet: Geoengineering and the Audacious Quest to Fix Earth's Climate

by Jeff Goodell

When Jeff Goodell first encountered the term "geoengineering," he had a vague sense that it involved outlandish schemes to counteract global warming. As a journalist, he was deeply skeptical. But he was also intrigued. The planet was in trouble. Could geoengineers help? Climate change may well be the biggest crisis humanity has ever faced. Temperatures in some regions of the world could increase by as much as fifteen degrees by the end of the century, causing rising sea levels and severe droughts. But change could also happen much more suddenly. What if we had a real climate emergency, the ecological equivalent of the subprime mortgage meltdown -- how could we cool the planet in a hurry? As Goodell shows in this bracing book, even if we could muster the political will for it, cutting greenhouse gas emissions alone may not be enough to reduce the risk of climate catastrophe. This has led some scientists to pursue extreme solutions: huge contraptions that would suck CO2 from the air, machines that would brighten clouds and deflect sunlight away from the earth, even artificial volcanoes that would spray heat-reflecting particles into the atmosphere. In How to Cool the Planet, Goodell explores the scientific, political, financial, and moral aspects of geoengineering. How are we to change the temperature of whole regions if we can't even predict next week's weather? What if a wealthy entrepreneur shoots particles into the stratosphere on his own? What about wars waged with climate control as the primary weapon? What happens to our relationship with nature when, as Goodell puts it, we all find ourselves living in a giant terrarium? And our options are dwindling. Maybe, Goodell suggests, we need to start taking geoengineering seriously. Maybe it's Plan B for the planet. And if it is, we need to know enough to get it right. Thoroughly reported and convincingly argued, How to Cool the Planet is a compelling tale of scientific hubris and technical daring. But it is also a thoughtful, even-handed look at a deeply complex and controversial issue. It's a book that will surely jump-start the next big debate about the future of life on earth.

Hotshots!

by Chris L. Demarest

Sparks from a train ignite a field baked for days. Then winds whip it into a fast-running blaze. With fire now spreading out of control, the hotshots are called. They're ready to roll. What are hotshots?They are an elite ground fire-fighting corps of men and women highly trained to understand the scientific nature of fire in order to go deep into the heart of a wildfire, beyond the reach of hose lines, to limit the destruction of land and wildlife. As more homes are being built into the natural landscape, the role of the hotshot in fighting fire has become increasingly important. With stunning pictures and an action-packed text, fine artist and volunteer firefighter Chris L. Demarest here captures the spirit of the dedicated hotshots and the real-life drama of the dangerous work they must do every day.

World Cultures and Geography: Western Hemisphere

by Marci Smith Deal Sarah Bednarz Inés Miyares

NIMAC-sourced textbook

McDougal Littell World Cultures and Geography: Eastern Hemisphere

by Marci Smith Deal Donna Ogle Charles White Sarah Bednarz Ines Miyares

The author provides an account of world cultures and their geographical significance across borders and explains the importance of linking history with geography.

Earth's Atmosphere

by Mcdougal Littell

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Earth's Water

by Mcdougal Littell

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Earth Science, Georgia Edition

by Mcdougal Littell

Textbook.

Focus on Earth Sciences, Standards Review and Practice

by Mcdougal Littel

NIMAC-sourced textbook

World Cultures and GEOGRAPHY: Eastern Hemisphere

by Sarah Witham Bednarz Inés M. Miyares Mark C. Schug Charles S. White

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Focus on Earth Sciences (California)

by Mcdougal-Littell

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Earth Science

by Mcdougal Littell

NIMAC-sourced textbook

McDougal Littell Earth Science

by Mcdougal Littell Houghton Mifflin Company

Earth Science textbook

Far from Shore: Chronicles of an Open Ocean Voyage

by Sophie Webb

In extremely deep waters (two miles deep), the vast sea appears empty. But as naturalist and artist Sophie Webb shows us, it is full of fascinating—yet difficult to study—life. Together with her shipmates, Sophie counts and collects samples of life in the deep ocean, from seabirds to dolphins, from winged fish to whales. Only their long-term field work can really help scientists determine the health of these remarkable creatures who need the clean deep ocean to survive.

Earth Science

by Nancy E. Spaulding Samuel N. Namowitz

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Houghton Mifflin Social Studies: World Cultures and Geography, Practice Book

by Houghton Mifflin

NIMAC-sourced textbook

McDougal Littell World Geography

by Marci Smith Deal Daniel D. Arreola James F. Petersen Rickie Sanders

The earth is a unique planet capable of supporting a wide variety of life forms. Human beings adapt and alter the environments on earth.

World Cultures and Geography

by Sarah Witham Bednarz Mark C. Schug Charles S. White Ines M. Miyares

This textbook contains unit lessons on Introduction to World Cultures and Geography, The United States and Canada, Latin America, Europe, Russia, and the Independent Republics, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Africa South of the Sahara, Southern Asia, East Asia, Australia, Oceania, and Antarctica. The book includes the biographies of nineteen eminent personalities.

McDougal Littell Science: Ecology

by Rita Ann Calvo Kenneth Cutler James Trefil

Scientists are curious. Since ancient times, they have been asking and answering questions about the world around them. Scientists are also very suspicious of the answers they get. They carefully collect evidence and test their answers many times before accepting an idea as correct. In this book you will see how scientific knowledge keeps growing and changing as scientists ask new questions and rethink what was known before.

McDougal Littell Science: The Changing Earth

by Mcdougal Littell

Scientists are curious. Since ancient times, they have been asking and answering questions about the world around them. Scientists are also very suspicious of the answers they get.

McDougal Littell Science: Space Science

by Mcdougal Littell

Scientists are curious. Since ancient times, they have been asking and answering questions about the world around them. Scientists are also very suspicious of the answers they get.

McDougal Littell Science: Earth’s Surface

by Mcdougal Littell

Scientists are curious. Since ancient times, they have been asking and answering questions about the world around them. Scientists are also very suspicious of the answers they get.

McDougal Littell Science: Earth’s Waters,Water Cycle,Habitat

by The Editors at the Houghton Mifflin Company

Earth Science Textbook covering Earth's Waters including The Water Planet, Freshwater Resources, Ocean Systems, and Ocean Environments.

Mcdougal Littell Science: Earth's Atmosphere

by Mcdougal Littell

Scientists are curious. Since ancient times, they have been asking and answering questions about the world around them. Scientists are also very suspicious of the answers they get. They carefully collect evidence and test their answers many times before accepting an idea as correct.

Big Coal: The Dirty Secret Behind America's Energy Future

by Jeff Goodell

President Bush has said coal is America's "economic destiny." Despite a century-long legacy that has claimed millions of lives and ravaged the environment, why has coal become hot again? Few of us realize that coal already supplies more than half the energy needed to power our iPods, laptops, lightsanything we use that consumes electricity. Every time we flip on a switch, we burn a lump of coal. Our desire to find a homegrown alternative to Mideast oil, the rising cost of oil and natural gas, and the fossil fuelfriendly mood in Washington will soon push our coal consumption through the roof. Because we have failed to develop alternative energy sources, coal has become the default fuel for the twenty-first century. In the tradition of Rachel Carson and Eric Schlosser, the veteran journalist Jeff Goodell examines the faulty assumptions underlying coal's revival and shatters the myth of cheap coal energy. In a compelling blend of hard-hitting investigative reporting, history, and business analysis, Big Coal illuminates the stark economic imperatives America faces and the collusion of business and politics that has already set us on the dangerous course. Filled with troubling environmental and health revelations, Big Coal shows us that our shiny white iPod economy is propped up by dirty black rocks.

Places In Time: A New Atlas Of American History

by Elspeth Leacock Susan Washburn Buckley Randy Jones

A tiny whaling village along the Pacific in 1490, New Plymouth as the Pilgrims settled in, Fort Mose as it welcomed African Americans escaping from slavery, Gettysburg on the day that decided the Civil War . . . <P><P>Places in Time offers a bird’s-eye view of twenty sites where American history was made. Each page opens an unforgettable window to the past, where you can find out just what it was like to live in one place on one day in our nation’s history.

Refine Search

Showing 27,401 through 27,425 of 31,239 results