Smithsonian Ocean: Our Water, Our World | 
enlarge | Author: Deborah Cramer Publisher: Collins Category: Book
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $21.00 You Save: $18.95 (47%)
New (35) Used (10) from $19.99
Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 232646
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 296 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.9 Dimensions (in): 11 x 9.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 0061343838 Dewey Decimal Number: 578.77 EAN: 9780061343834 ASIN: 0061343838
Publication Date: October 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Nobel Prize winner Al Gore wrote of Deborah Cramer's previous book Great Waters, "I urge everyone to read this book, to act on its message, and to pass on its teachings." Now Cramer offers a groundbreaking book for an even more urgent time. Our lives depend on the sea. As gifted science writer Deborah Cramer makes clear in this extraordinary volume, the ocean has been earth's lifeline for more than three and a half billion years. Life began in the scalding inferno of deep-sea hot springs. The first cell, the first plant, and the first animal were all born in the sea. Climate changes wrought by the sea created evolutionary pathways for mammals and gave rise to our human ancestors some 200,000 years ago. The one, interconnected sea still sustains us. Invisible plants in the ocean's sunlit surface give us air to breathe. Rushing currents supply water to the atmosphere's protective greenhouse and rain to dry land. But as Cramer reveals in this sweeping look at earth's biography, the vital partnership between earth and the life it nourishes has recently been disrupted. Today, a single terrestrial species, man, has begun to alter the health of the sea itself. The mark of humans on the seas is now everywhere—from the fertile waters of continental shelves to the icy reaches of the poles, from the dazzling diversity of coral reefs to the porous edge of estuaries. Even the open ocean bears clear traces of our harmful ways. Scientists believe human impact may have already sparked a catastrophic event that could change the sea and the earth irrevocably: the sixth mass planetary extinction on a scale unseen since the demise of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. But unlike the forces that caused previous extinctions, humankind can make a choice. We can choose the mark we wish to make and the legacy we leave behind. Written in the passionate tradition of Rachel Carson, Smithsonian Ocean is at once a book for our time and for the ages. Carson wrote: "One way to open your eyes is to ask yourself: What if I had never seen this before? What if I knew I would never see it again?" Cramer's powerful and inspiring message is equally a wake-up call: "We hold earth's life-giving waters—and our future—in our hands." Our lives depend on the sea.
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| Customer Reviews:
not just a pretty book January 1, 2009 Smithsonian Oceans is a beautiful book in words as well as pictures. Cramer clearly explains the importance of the oceans from the beginning of life in the deep ocean to the many ways the oceans are critical to our life on land. The pictures draw you in and her words keep you there. It is a good book for all ages.
A book that almost drove our reviewer into incoherence December 9, 2008 Cramer has done it, she has absolutely done it. Smithsonian Ocean's purpose is one of the most enlightened that books have seen in recent memory, and it is executed with nothing less than perfection. The images contained within are spectacularly striking; They represent the apex of recording the visual poetry that Nature, and more specifically the Ocean, puts forth each and every day. They are the type that you will forever save a mental image of, so that you might conjure up its countenance any time that you require a pick-me-up or a reason to go on. They are the type that cause poets to go insane while trying to think of that perfect description, the type whose brilliance cannot even be fully realized until you see it, forget about it after years, have a horribly painful and hard life filled with death, numbness, and withdraw from society, and then finally come back to only to realize that you'd been a fool for ever forgetting the way they look. As if, after seeing the superior beauty that the Ocean offers, we needed more motivation to help save it, Cramer goes on to systematically and thoroughly explain why the connective sea is as necessary and crucial to our, and everything else's, survival.
The images and words of Smithsonian Ocean are completely devastating. They fill you with the kind of love for the earth that parents feel for their children the first time they see them out of the womb; You feel that you decidedly need to preserve and improve the condition of the ocean, as if it were your offspring, for you know that its well-being is in your hands. You feel that no measure made in attempt to achieve this goal is too far: "Cross my heart and hope to die, stick a Needle in my eye" has never been more applicable.
Reviewed by Jordan Dacayanan
Substantive and beauitful: a well told story of our oceans, their past and possible futures. November 2, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is an amazing book: it covers a vast amount of time and space in beautifuly written, easy to understand prose - accompanied by magnificent and photos that support the text.
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