|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
These words are written on the SOOth anniversary of Columbus'
discovery of the New World. Surely the deep-space exploration of
other worlds in our Solar System over the past few decades is an
event of similar magnitude. Man has traveled far enough to see
Spaceship Earth suspended alone in black space. And he has voyaged
even farther to marvel at the crescent Earth rising over the Moon's
cratered terrain. Instrumented spacecraft have toured the entire
Solar System even beyond the ninth planet Pluto. This work of
science Morphology of the Rocky Members of the Solar System is an
inquiry about our extended home. As with the Darwinian and
Copernican paradigms, the nature of our planetary system, as the
extended world around us, has great significance for those who
ponder the human condition. The deep-space views of our Planet
Ocean with its sweeping clouds, and moving oceans and creeping
continents must rank as the greatest photograph ever taken. Viewing
Spaceship Earth hanging in the vast void is an almost frightening
experience. We are so alone! It is easy to understand why so many
are attracted to a simpler account of origins, like the allegorical
tale of creation written in heroic style (but eschewing math, maps,
figures, tables, references, and evidence) in the first eleven
chapters of Genesis. This treatise examines the morphology of the
six rocky planets and their 27 satellites from a broad perspective.
The explosion of interest, effort, and information about the ocean
since about 1950 has produced many thousand scientific articles and
many hun dred books. In fact, the outpouring has been so large that
authors have been unable to read much of what has been published,
so they have tended to concentrate their own work within smaller
and smaller subfields of oceanog raphy. Summaries of information
published in books have taken two main paths. One is the grouping
of separately authored chapters into symposia type books, with
their inevitable overlaps and gaps between chapters. The other is
production of lightly researched books containing drawings and
tables from previous pUblications, with due credit given but
showing assem bly-line writing with little penetration of the
unknown. Only a few books have combined new and previous data and
thoughts into new maps and syntheses that relate the contributions
of observed biological, chemical, geological, and physical
processes to solve broad problems associated with the shape,
composition, and history of the oceans. Such a broad synthesis is
the objective of this book, in which we tried to bring together
many of the pieces of research that were deemed to be of manageable
size by their originators. The composite may form a sort of plateau
above which later studies can rise, possibly benefited by our assem
bly of data in the form of new maps and figures.
|
|