Catastrophes are part of Earth's real history. Its grim
disasters, acting as a backdrop against which human dramas have
been played out, have been recorded in many ancient writings. As
Milne shows, doomsday catastrophism, once the prerogative of
18th-century geologists steeped in the Biblical memory of the Great
Flood, has now regained respectability. Catastrophism applies to
many disciplines such as planetary science, biology, climatology,
and evolutionary theory. The universe itself, we now believe, is a
product of a giant cosmic catastrophe. Indeed life itself may have
arisen when the moon may have crystallized out of a crashing
mini-planet that enabled organisms to emerge into tidal pools.
Floods and natural disasters seem to be on the increase
everywhere and are no longer just a Third World problem. The fear
of climatic disturbances are the source of regular international
conferences, and it is seriously suggested that the U.S. military
shoot down plummeting comets before they destroy civilization, as
they once destroyed the dinosaurs. Milne provides a contemporary
look at catastrophism in its scientific and in its disastrous
earth-shattering sense. Within one volume a wide range of
up-to-date scientific facts and concepts are examined. Milne gives
readers interested in scientific controversies, contemporary
affairs and environmental issues an important document that
chronicles the end of a turbulent and disturbing 2,000 years.
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