An internationally recognized expert on the geology
of barrier islands, Orrin H. Pilkey is one of the rare
academics who engages in public advocacy about
science-related issues. He has written dozens of books
and articles explaining coastal processes to lay
readers, and he is a frequent and outspoken interviewee
in the mainstream media. Here, the colourful scientist
takes on climate change deniers in an outstanding and
much-needed primer on the science of global change and
its effects. After explaining the greenhouse effect,
Pilkey, writing with son Keith, turns to the damage it
is causing: sea level rise, ocean acidification, glacier
and sea ice melting, changing habitats, desertification,
and the threats to animals, humans, coral reefs,
marshes, and mangroves. These explanations are
accompanied by Mary Edna Fraser's stunning batiks
depicting the large-scale arenas in which climate change
plays out. The Pilkeys directly confront and rebut
arguments typically advanced by global change deniers.
Particularly valuable are their discussions of
"Climategate," a manufactured scandal that undermined
respect for the scientific community, and the denial
campaigns by the fossil fuel industry, which they
compare to the tactics used by the tobacco companies a
generation ago to obfuscate findings on the harm caused
by cigarettes.
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