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Unearthing the Underworld reveals the hidden world of rocks—the keepers of secrets of past environments, changing climates, and the pulse of life over billions of years. Even the most seemingly ordinary stone can tell us much about the history of this planet, opening vistas of ancient worlds of ice, raging floods, strange unbreathable atmospheres, and prehistoric worlds teeming with life. Remarkably, many types of rocks owe their existence to living organisms—from the remains of bodies of dead animals to rocks formed from rotting ancient forests, or even created by the activity of fungi, bacteria, and viruses. Anything but dull and uninteresting, rocks are intriguing portals that illuminate the secret underworld upon which we live.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
July 6, 2023 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781789147490
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781789147490
- File size: 39827 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
May 29, 2023
This illuminating if abstruse study by paleontologist McNamara (Dragons’ Teeth and Thunderstones) explores how sedimentary rocks form and what they can teach about the evolution of life on Earth. He explains that such rocks as sandstone, mudstone, and limestone are compacted particulate matter created from the erosion of igneous and metamorphic rocks or, sometimes, from the remains of dead organisms (coal, for instance, is made of fossilized plants). “Limestone is a reflection of the evolution of life,” McNamara contends, explaining that because the rock draws its “carbonate from carbon dioxide dissolved in water,” it provides clues about past levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide and thus the environment’s ability to sustain life. Throughout, McNamara leans heavily on specialist language (“This results in the release of intracellular bicarbonate ions which on contact with the seawater induce precipitation of minute aragonite crystals”), but readers who tough it out will appreciate the glimpses he offers into the distant past, as when he describes how a Cambrian-era limestone deposit near the Dead Sea reveals the evolutionary arrival of marine invertebrates. Though dense, this still has some gems worth digging up. Photos.
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