"Scorched" is a vivid journey through southern Africa's
mesmerizing landscapes as climate change sets in. It wanders
through the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands to capture the last faltering
calls of a rain frog that was named after the hobbit Bilbo Baggins.
The author pauses for thought following an elephant stampede to
consider how savannahs might shift in an altered climate. She
trails the wading birds of the West Coast into the high Arctic
tundra for their annual breeding season before returning to a Cape
which is crisping over as drought continues to grip the province.
Another world exists somewhere beyond the global politicking of
superpowers and petrostates.
This is the place where a solitary bee continues to pollinate
the pale, demure flower of an orchid near Darling, or where the
limey coral skeleton hosts its colorful algae on a Sodwana reef.
These plants and animals many of which are unique to the region
continue to do what their ancestors have done for millions of
years. Yet the world is shifting its shape around them. In places
it is warming and drying, elsewhere the rains come in greater
deluges. Some are abandoned by the other plants and animals with
which they have cohabited, as species retreat before the onslaught
of rising greenhouse gases and altered weather patterns.
"Scorched" marvels at the world in which we live: the improbable
balance of the air round us and the way it banks away the Sun's
energy to keep us warm and thriving, the way life has evolved in
this planetary incubator and how one species has risen up to become
a potent geophysical force with the ability to shift a system which
has evolved over 4600 million years.
"Scorched" gives powerful local color to a global problem. It
ponders the morality of the changes humankind has wrought, and the
future of life as we know it.
"Leonie S. Joubert" studied journalism and history at the
universities of Rhodes (South Africa) and Stellenbosch (South
Africa). It was her enduring fascination with the human condition
and its place in the natural order of things that led her to take
up science writing from a small study in Wynberg, overlooking the
Cape peninsula.
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Review This Product
Fri, 4 Jan 2008 | Review
by: Frank S.
This book should be mandatory reading for every South African. The effects of Climate Change are going to dramatically change our world and our country. This book illustrates across a number of levels the science behind climate change and the impacts it will have.
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