This is a book about an ocean that vanished six
million years ago - the ocean of Tethys. Named after a
Greek sea nymph, there is a sense of mystery about such
a vast, ancient ocean, of which all that remains now are
a few little pools, like the Caspian Sea. There were
other great oceans in the history of the Earth -
Iapetus, Panthalassa - but Tethys was the last of them,
vanishing a mere moment (in geological terms) before Man
came on the scene. Once Tethys stretched across the
world. How do we know? And how could such a vast ocean
vanish? The clues of its existence are scattered from
Morocco to China. This book tells the story of the
ocean, from its origins some 250 million years ago, to
its disappearance. It also tells of its impact on life
on Earth. The dinosaurs were just beginning to get going
when Tethys formed, and they were long dead by the time
it disappeared. Dorrik Stow describes the powerful
forces that shaped the ocean; the marine life it once
held and the rich deposits of oil that life left behind;
the impact of its currents on environment and climate.
It is rarely realized how very important oceans are to
climate and environment, and therefore to life on
Earth.The story of Tethys is also a story of
extinctions, and floods, and extraordinary episodes such
as the virtual drying up of the Mediterranean, before
being filled again by a dramatic cascade of water over
the straits of Gibralter. And in the telling of that
story, we also learn how geologists put together the
clues in rocks and fossils to discover Tethys and its
history. |
|