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| Genre/Form: | Popular works |
|---|---|
| Additional Physical Format: | Online version: Morton, R. L. (Ronald Lee) Music of the earth. New York : Plenum Press, c1996 (OCoLC)647102392 |
| Document Type: | Book |
| All Authors / Contributors: |
R L Morton |
| ISBN: | 0306452634 9780306452635 |
| OCLC Number: | 34078193 |
| Description: | xi, 312 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. |
| Contents: | ch. 1. Those creepy continents -- ch. 2. The fire within -- ch. 3. Living on an eggshell -- ch. 4. And away we go -- ch. 5. When the waters dance -- ch. 6. Harvesting the Earth -- ch. 7. Winter's breath -- ch. 8. Life on the edge -- ch. 9. Summer's fire -- ch. 10. Leaping lizards and cosmic nights. |
| Responsibility: | Ron L. Morton. |
| More information: |
Abstract:
Through the resonance of musical metaphor he attunes both our minds and our senses to the most important discoveries in geology and explores the beauty, power, and infinite variety of the land - and seascapes that compose our earth.
Morton reveals a dynamic system in which the prodigious forces of heat, pressure, molten rock, and water maintain a delicate and harmonious balance that has sustained life for millennia. Cracking, crumbling, colliding, and exploding, our earth is in a constant state of growth and renewal. Morton delves into territories at once fascinating and terrifying.
With him we revisit the sites of the largest and most dangerous volcanoes and earthquakes in history - from the catastrophic forces that buried once-great cities and civilizations to the explosions that have caused unmerciful extremes of climate, creating famine and hardship across the globe. Morton goes on to show how such turbulence is ineluctably central to the earth's development. With infectious enthusiasm, Morton shares with us a more expansive vision of the earth - in particular, the revolutionary theory of continental drift. Moreover, he explores the phenomena of spreading oceans, the massive collisions that create our breathtaking mountain ranges, and the evolution of the planet from its fiery beginnings to the present day.
On the lighter side, Morton playfully shares a more down-home variety of earthlore, including lively and imaginative, yet rock-solid explanations for hotsprings, rockslides, geysers, and the rich variety of soils, metals, and rocks that make up our planet.
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