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Rain Of Iron And Ice - The Very Real Threat Of Comet And Asteroid Bombardment (Paperback, Revised)
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Discovery Miles 6 390
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Rain Of Iron And Ice - The Very Real Threat Of Comet And Asteroid Bombardment (Paperback, Revised)
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There was a time when science refused to believe that meteors
actually fell from the sky; now, scientists soberly calculate the
possibility that one of those falls could destroy a city - or the
entire human race. Lewis (codirector for science of the NASA/Univ.
of Arizona Space Engineering Research Center) attempts to place the
threat of cosmic bombardment in down-to-earth perspective by
systematically building up evidence. Most early accounts of
meteorite falls were ignored by later scientists; even Meteor
Crater in Arizona was long considered a volcanic cone, despite the
absence of volcanic rock in the area. The Tunguska event - a meteor
explosion over Siberia in 1908 - was not properly investigated for
nearly 20 years. Only with the exploration of space did the full
truth become evident: Every planetary surface we have examined
shows proof of massive bombardment from space, although erosion has
obliterated many of the traces on Earth's surface. Not all traces,
however - numerous craterlike features show the geological stigmata
of high impacts, such as shocked quartz crystals and the tiny glass
beads known as microtektites. A crater near Yucatan is now believed
to be the remnant of the impact that destroyed the dinosaurs. The
dramatic impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 on Jupiter converted most
of the remaining skeptics. Lewis draws parallels with nuclear
explosions to explain the possible effect of large impacts on human
populations; at the same time, he points out that even the largest
nuclear device ever exploded (60 megatons) was far less damaging
than what we might expect from the impact of a million-ton
asteroid, of which there are tens of thousands in orbits that
threaten Earth. In his final chapter, Lewis proposes a space-going
capability to divert the most threatening asteroids and to exploit
the mineral resources of the richest. An apocalyptic vision that
should be taken with the utmost seriousness by anyone concerned
with the long-range fate of the human race. (Kirkus Reviews)
Rain of Iron and Ice shows us the unmistakable evidence--from
spaceprobe flybys of the planets to the scars on our own Earth--of
cataclysmic comet and asteroid impacts. By comparing what we know
about the earth's geology and paleontology with the ages of the
other planets and moons in our solar system, Lewis makes the
strongest case yet for sudden, dramatic extinctions and assesses
the risks to planet Earth.
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