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" Paleoclimate / "
Michael L. Bender.
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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879880
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Main Entry
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Bender, Michael L.
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Title & Author
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Paleoclimate /\ Michael L. Bender.
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Publication Statement
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Princeton, New Jersey :: Princeton University Press,, [2013]
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Series Statement
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Princeton primers in climate
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Page. NO
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1 online resource (xi, 306 pages) :: illustrations
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ISBN
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0691145555
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: 1400846374
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: 1400847559
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: 9780691145556
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: 9781400846375
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: 9781400847556
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0691145547
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0691145555
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9780691145549
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Bibliographies/Indexes
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Contents
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Earth's climate system -- The faint young sun -- Precambrian glaciations -- Regulation of the Earth system and global temperature -- The late Paleozoic ages -- Equable climates of the Mesozoic and Paleogene -- The Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum -- The long cooling of the Cenozoic -- The origin of Northern Hemisphere glaciation and the Pleistocene ice ages -- Rapid climate change during the last glacial period -- The Holocene -- Anthropogenic global warming in the context of paleoclimate.
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Abstract
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'Earth's climate has undergone dramatic changes over the geologic timescale. At one extreme, Earth has been glaciated from the poles to the equator for periods that may have lasted millions of years. At another, temperatures were once so warm that the Canadian Arctic was heavily forested and large dinosaurs lived on Antarctica. Paleoclimatology is the study of such changes and their causes. Studying Earth's long-term climate history gives scientists vital clues about anthropogenic global warming and how climate is affected by human endeavor. In this book, Michael Bender, an internationally recognized authority on paleoclimate, provides a concise, comprehensive, and sophisticated introduction to the subject. After briefly describing the major periods in Earth history to provide geologic context, he discusses controls on climate and how the record of past climate is determined. The heart of the book then proceeds chronologically, introducing the history of climate changes over millions of years--its patterns and major transitions, and why average global temperature has varied so much. The book ends with a discussion of the Holocene (the past 10,000 years) and by putting manmade climate change in the context of paleoclimate."--Provided by publisher.
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Subject
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Paleoclimatology.
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Subject
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Paläoklima
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Subject
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Paleoclimatology.
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Subject
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SCIENCE-- Earth Sciences-- Geography.
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Subject
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SCIENCE-- Earth Sciences-- Geology.
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Subject
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SCIENCE-- Earth Sciences-- Meteorology Climatology.
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Dewey Classification
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551.609/01
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LC Classification
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QC884.B39 2013eb
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