Applied ecology Books
£40.38
Editions Orizons LÉcologie trahie par les siens
£28.80
Les Impliqués La dissociation des éléments
£17.10
Les Impliqués Cosmopolis
£11.40
Les Impliqués Les animaux et la mer
£24.30
Les Impliqués Les racines de lespoir
£27.00
Les Impliqués Léconomie verte au Sénégal et dans le monde
£17.10
Four Palaces Publishing When Home Hurts
£12.99
Red Horizon Press The Living Map
£10.64
Hive Light Publishing Voices from the Hive
£15.21
Beverley Lilliann Alice Joubert Cedar of the Baviaanskloof
£12.76
Rich Green The Art Of Reading Nature
£16.62
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp LOcéan de Plastique
£12.73
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Renatura Terra
£13.02
Apophis Enterprises LLC The Dust That Watches You Back.
£8.99
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Autosuffisance
£999.99
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Pollution
£999.99
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Comprendre les énergies renouvelables en 10 étapes
£14.66
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp La Voiture Électrique Décryptée
£12.61
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp LInvisible Qui Pousse
£12.78
Elsevier Science Treatise on Estuarine and Coastal Science
Book Synopsis
£2,878.50
Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc Thorp and Covichs Freshwater Invertebrates
Book SynopsisTrade Review"...beautifully laid out, solidly bound, with crisp print and vibrant (mostly) high-resolution images. My recommendation is to purchase this book even if you already own the third edition, as redundancies are outweighed by new material;..." --Bulletin of the Entomological Society of Canada, Thorp and Covich's Freshwater Invertebrates, Volume 1, Fourth Edition "...a comprehensive revision and expansion of the previous edition...I recommend it as valuable reading for everyone who needs to develop a more detailed world-wide understanding of freshwater invertebrates." --European Journal of EntomologyTable of Contents1. Introduction to Invertebrates of Inland Waters 2. Overview of Inland Water Habitats 3. Collection and Culturing Techniques 4. Functional Relationships of Freshwater Invertebrates 5. Ecology of Invasive Alien Invertebrates 6. Economic Aspects of Freshwater Invertebrates 7. Free-Living Protozoa 8. Phylum Porifera 9. Phylum Cnidaria 10. Phylum Platyhelminthes 11. Phylum Nemertea 12. Phylum Gastrotricha 13. Phylum Rotifera 14. Phylum Nematoda 15. Phylum Nematomorpha 16. Phyla Ectoprocta and Entoprocta (Bryozoans) 17. Phylum Tardigrada 18. Introduction to Mollusca and the Class Gastropoda 19. Class Bivalvia 20. Introduction to Annelida and the Class Polychaeta 21. Class Clitellata: Oligochaeta 22. Class Clitellata: Branchiobdellida 23. Class Clitellata: Hirudinida and Acanthobdellida 24. Introduction to the Phylum Arthropoda 25. Subphylum Chelicerata, Class Arachnida 26. Subphylum Myriapoda, Class Diplopoda 27. Introduction to “Crustacea 28. Class Branchiopoda 29. Class Maxillopoda 30. Class Ostracoda 31. Class Malacostraca, Superorders Peracarida and Syncarida 32. Class Malacostraca, Order Decapoda 33. Hexapoda – Introduction to Insects and Collembola 34. Order Ephemeroptera 35. Order Odonata 36. Order Plecoptera 37. Order Hemiptera 38. Order Trichoptera 39. Order Coleoptera 40. Order Diptera 41. Minor Insect Orders
£108.00
Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc Methods in Stream Ecology
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsSection D Organic Matter Dynamics 23. Stable Isotopes in Stream Food Webs 24. Dissolved Organic Matter 25. Transport and Storage of Fine Particulate Organic Matter 26. Coarse Particulate Organic Matter: Storage, Transport, and Retention 27. Leaf-Litter Breakdown 28. Riparian Processes and Interactions 29. Dynamics of Wood Section E Ecosystem Processes 30. Conservative and Reactive Solute Dynamics 31. Nutrient Limitation and Uptake 32. Nitrogen Transformations 33. Phosphorus Limitation, Uptake, and Turnover in Benthic Stream Algae 34. Stream Metabolism 35. Secondary Production and Quantitative Food Webs 36. Elemental Content of Stream Biota Section F Ecosystem Assessment 37. Ecological Assessment With Benthic Algae 38. Macroinvertebrates as Biotic Indicators of Environmental Quality 39. Environmental Quality Assessment Using Stream Fishes 40. Establishing Causee Effect Relationships in Multistressor Environments
£56.66
Elsevier Science Methods in Stream Ecology Two Volume Set
Book Synopsis
£78.26
Taylor & Francis Ltd Ecological Relations
Book SynopsisInternational relations (IR) traditionally theorises the social relationships between different peoples. In so doing, it ignores the ecological bases to life - the ground upon which we walk, the all-encompassing bind of nature. In the current climate of environmental degradation, international relations as a theory must in turn be altered. By broadening the term ''relations'' to include this ecological framework, international relations can be approached from a changed perspective. In this book, Susan Board uses a Foucauldian model of power to expand the boundaries of international relations. She argues that ''relations'' can include other people or animals, and are not exclusively between states. Such a perspective acts to denaturalise the marginalization of women, animals and indigenous peoples and hence expand the constrained discipline of IR. By rethinking international relations to put ecological foundations first, we are pushed to think and act with consideration of the longTable of Contents1. The Exclusivity of International Relations 2. Understanding of an Ecological Perspective 3. System Building and 'Game Openings': Seeking an Inclusive Attitude for Excluded Ecological Relations 4. Ecological Relations: the Case of Women 5. Ecological Relations: the Case of Non-Human Animals 6. Ecological Relations: the Case of Indigenous Peoples
£999.99
Elsevier Science Encyclopedia of Ecology
Book Synopsis
£1,496.25
Taylor & Francis Inc Ecology of Estuaries Anthropogenic Effects 1 CRC
Book SynopsisEcology of Estuaries represents the most definitive and comprehensive source of reference information available on the human impact on estuarine ecosystems. The volume discusses both acute and insidious pollution problems plaguing these coastal ecotones. It also provides a detailed examination of the deleterious and pervasive effects of human activities on biotic communities and sensitive habitat areas in estuaries. Specific areas covered include organic loading, oil pollution, polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, chlorinated hydrocarbons, heavy metals, dredging and dredged-spoil disposal, radionuclides, as well as other contaminants and processes. The diverse components of these anthropogenic influences are assembled in an organized framework and presented in a clear and concise style that facilitates their understanding.Table of ContentsTypes of Pollutants. Waste Disposal Strategies. Biological Effects of Waste Disposal. Organic Loading: Eutrophication Problems. Oil Pollution: Sources of Oil Pollution. Composition of Oil. Fate of Polluting Oil. Effects of Polluting Oil on Organisms. Case Studies. Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons: Distribution. PAHs in Estuarine Systems. Environmental Cycle of PAHCompounds. Chlorinated Hydrocarbons: Organochlorine Pesticides. DDT. Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs). Case Studies. Heavy Metals: Sources of Heavy Metals. Bioaccumulation of Heavy Metals. Heavy Metals in Estuarine Systems. Radioactivity: Radioactivity and Radiation. Radioactivity and Estuarine Organisms. Radioactive Waste Disposal. Dredging And Dredged-Spoil Disposal: Dredging Devices. Environmental Effects of Dredging and Dredged-Spoil Disposal. Case Studies. Regulation Of Dredged-Material Disposal. Effects Of Electric Generating Stations: Historical Development. Effects Of Power Plant Operation. Case Studies
£308.75
LEGARE STREET PR The Laccoliths of the Black Hills
£15.15
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Plants by Numbers
Book SynopsisThis open access book takes a queer, feminist, and decolonial technoscience approach to the ecologies that emerge from our entanglements with nonhumans (air, rocks, algae, trees, soil and plants) and computational hard/software. In Plants by Numbers, artists and theorists working with computation address the urgent need to think beyond the human paradigm, opening up new fields of debate that question the troubled relationship between ecosystems and human technology.Organised around three key themes--techno-nature entanglements, plants as resistant agents, and becoming-with-plants--the volume provides a vital pathway through complex theoretical ideas that inform the practices of artists working in the fields of computation and ecology.Fusing art theoretical and art practice approaches, the contributors describe how we might design, make and imagine computational processes differently, or otherwise, through the co-production of artworks with plants. Showing how these artworks mighTrade ReviewA text that demonstrates the vital importance of observing and treating plants as our companion species, and as cohabitants of this planet to bend towards and learn from, as we ponder our own significance and survival, threatening the end of the anthropocene. * Legacy Russell, Executive Director and Chief Curator of The Kitchen, author of Glitch Feminism (2020) *Plants by Numbers works through how coloniality shapes, but does not absolutely envelop, our queerly inter-human and inter-ecological worlds. Rethinking classificatory taxonomies, the book centres plant-life and its aesthetic-scientific possibilities in an eloquent intervention into studies of livingness, affect, and relationality. * Katherine McKittrick, Professor and Canada Research Chair in Black Studies, Queen’s University, Canada; Author of Dear Science and Other Stories (2021) *This timely collection of accounts by artists, curators, technoscientists and theorists speculates on different modes of world-making and creating kinship with plants, establishing a rich ground for more-than human entanglements. * Petra Löffler, Professor of Contemporary Media Theory and History, Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg, Germany *Growing from a simple prompt, to consider numbering-otherwise, this volume brings together artistic, academic and community-building studies and productions of co-constitutive life worlds of plants and soil, computation and simulation, humans and more-than-humans. Rooted in anti-colonial, Black and Indigenous, trans-feminist and queer science and technology studies and poetics, shifting away from numbering as a method of control, and generously reimagining accounts, plots and digging as critical cultivating methods and creative practices, Plants By Numbers is essential reading (and experiencing) for artists, scholars, organizers, gardeners, farmers, teachers, observers, dreamers and anyone moved by the transformational and technocultural worlding of entangled plant lives. * Jas Rault & T.L. Cowan, co-authors of Heavy Processing (2023) *In our data-driven world, this collection asks how we might articulate an ethico-politics of numbers with respect to the more-than-human world. Respect is key here, for the power of enumeration but also for its limits, and for the irreducible relationality of sustainable world-making. * Lucy Suchman, Professor Emerita, Anthropology of Science and Technology, Lancaster University, UK *Table of ContentsAcknowledgements List of Contributors List of Plates List of Figures Introduction Part One: Techno-nature entanglements 1. Afro-now-ist Stories of Resistance: A Conversation with Stephanie Dinkins, Stephanie Dinkins (Stony Brook University, USA) and Srimoyee Mitra (University of Michigan, USA) 2. The Compromised/Compromising Life of a Farmed Plant, Elaine Gan (Wesleyan University, USA) 3. As Children of Plants, we Play in our Machine Gardens, Amy Youngs (Ohio State University, USA) 4. Co-operating with Diatoms - queer fabulations of a world feeling computing, Helen V. Pritchard (HGK-FHNW University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland) 5. So-called Plants, Possible Bodies, Jara Rocha and Femke Snelting (Interdependent researchers, Barcelona and Brussels) Part Two: Plants – resistance, regeneration and alliance 6. Forests that Compute, Jennifer Gabrys (University of Cambridge, UK) 7. Watered by Data and Other Bio-economic Thoughts: A Conversation Between Curator Belinda Kwan and Artist Stephanie Rothenberg, Belinda Kwan (Independent curator, Canada) and Stephanie Rothenberg (SUNY Buffalo, USA) 8. Tending to 2030m3: How to regenerate regeneration? How to unasphalt asphalt?, Helen V. Pritchard (HGK-FHNW University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland), Eric Snodgrass (Linnaeus University/Linköping, Sweden) Miranda Moss (Artist, South Africa), Daniel Gustafsson (Linnaeus University, Sweden 9. Decolonization, Computation, Propagation: Phyto-human alliances in the pathways towards generative justice, Ron Eglash, Audrey Bennett, Lionel Robert, Kwame Porter Robinson, Matthew Garvin, Mark Guzdial (all, University of Michigan, USA) Part Three: Becoming-with-plants 10. Codely Phytographia: an artist’s material history of writing code with trees, Jane Prophet (University of Michigan, USA) 11. Tehran of Trees, Sina Seifee (Artist, Belgium/Iran) 12. Writing in the Wind: Ecopoetics and geoengineering, Joel Ong (York University, Canada) 13. Sunbot Swarm: Absurdist Cyborg Systems for House Plants, Kathleen McDermott (NYU Tandon, USA) 14. Yellow Furry Lullaby, Breakwater, Youngsook Choi and Taey Iohe (Artists, UK/Korea) Glossary Index
£85.50
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Common Buzzard
Book SynopsisBased on many years of personal research, and a thorough knowledge of the European literature, the authors provide an eminently readable account of the biology of the Common Buzzard. Whatever your interests in birds, I can recommend this book for its content of information and insight.' Professor Ian Newton OBE, FRS, FRSESoaring majestically on thermals with broad wings raised, the Common Buzzard is a familiar sight for many people across Eurasia. In fact, thanks to a remarkable ability to adapt to local conditions, it is now one of the most abundant hawks in the world. The Common Buzzard can exploit a variety of nest sites, and has an eclectic diet that ranges from earthworms and voles to woodpigeons and even deer carcasses. This is a species rich in paradoxes. Why does a hawk evolved for hunting small mammals thrive on invertebrates and carrion? How can a raptor renowned for dramatic territorial displays occur at such high densities? And why does such a large bird that
£71.25
Rowman & Littlefield This Green and Growing Land
Book SynopsisFrom Benjamin Franklin's campaign to combat pollution at the Philadelphia's docks in the 1750s to the movement against climate change today, American environmentalists have sought to protect the natural world and promote a healthy human society. In This Green and Growing Land, historian Kevin Armitage shows how the story of American environmentalismpart philosophy, part social movement--is in no small way a story of America itself, of the way citizens have self-organized, have thought of their communities and their government, and have used their power to protect and enrich the land. Armitage skillfully analyzes the economic and social forces begetting environmental change and emphasizes the responses of a variety of ordinary Americansas well as a few well-known leadersto these complex issues. This concise and engaging survey of more than 250 years of activism tells the story of a magnificent American achievementand the ongoing problems that environmentalism faces.Trade ReviewArmitage, professor of history at the University of Miami-Ohio, traces the long history of environmental activism in the U.S. in this comprehensive and accessible volume, highlighting the ways in which the conservation movement has evolved from the 18th century to the 21st century. Armitage describes the contamination of Philadelphia’s Dock Creek in the mid-18th century, when tanneries and slaughterhouses used the waterway ‘as their dump.’ Benjamin Franklin and others insisted that public health and the quality of the shared environment take precedence over private business interests, a position that helped lay a foundation for government regulation and smarter resource management. In the mid-19th century, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau celebrated the great outdoors as a precious resource that should not be commodified, and Armitage relates how such sentiment was further popularized in the early 20th century by John Muir and legitimized in 1916 with the creation of the National Park Service. Legislation in subsequent years helped to preserve more land, as did the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency in the 1970s. Armitage remains unfazed by climate-change skeptics and relishes the challenge they pose to the environmentally concerned; whether they pay attention to this valuable narrative is another matter. * Publishers Weekly *Armitage highlights the individuals and organizations whose efforts contributed to America’s conservation of its natural assets. From grassroots action to government policies, he traces the changing relationship we’ve had with our land, air, and water since Ben Franklin fought industrial waste in Philadelphia, through our expansion to the Pacific coast, and into the modern era. Our use and abuse of resources reflect ideological shifts, and Armitage puts these into social and political context, from the Industrial Revolution through the recognition of nature’s limits and the spurring of scientific research into the effects our species is having on the planet. The modern environmental movement, modeled on anti–Vietnam War protests, achieved major victories in the 1970s, resulting in huge reductions in industrial pollution. Although Armitage sidesteps much of today’s charged political debate, he emphasizes the fact that the fight to defend the environment continues. The title, from a song by Phil Ochs, a folk singer associated with 1960s activism, reminds us of the grace and beauty of our land and our duty to protect it. * Booklist *“Anyone interested in understanding the democratic promise, controversies and achievements of the environmental movement will benefit greatly from this brilliant book by Kevin Armitage, the Dean of a new generation of environmental historians. It is unsurpassed in both breadth and depth, taught me things I didn’t know – such as Ben Franklin was an environmentalist, and is a fun read despite its serious topic.” -- Paul R. Ehrlich, author of "The Population Bomb" and "The Annihilation of Nature""Most valuable when it puts the rest of the story -- the role of unions, labor organizers, Hispanic and African American leaders, farming groups -- into the more conventional narrative of purely "environmental" groups, and does so from the founding of the Republic!" -- Carl Pope, former Executive Director of the Sierra ClubTable of ContentsChapter 1: The Horns in Dock Creek Chapter 2: The Science and Nature of Empathy Chapter 3: Progressive Publics and the Social Natural Order Chapter 4: A Green New Deal Chapter 5: A Wilderness Society Chapter 6: Damming the Arid West Chapter 7: The Atomic Body Politic Chapter 8: Abundance in the Age of Ecology Chapter 9: Science Denial in the Age of Global Disruption Bibliography
£38.00
Edinburgh University Press HolderlinS Philosophy of Nature
Book SynopsisThis collection of 15 essays by distinguished international scholars reconsiders what Friedrich Holderlin's work reveals about the impulses toward form and formlessness in nature and the role that poetry plays in creating Holderlin's 'harmonious opposition'.
£20.89
Martino Fine Books Human Behavior and the Principle of Least Effort
Book Synopsis
£40.57
Workman Publishing The Rescue Effect
Book Synopsis
£17.09
Chelsea Green Publishing Co The Ecological Gardener: How to Create Beauty and
Book SynopsisEngaging and quirky; full of ideas and inspiration for garden projects that you'll be itching to try for yourself. Dave Goulson, author of The Garden Jungle A thoughtful and practical guide Country Life Design a garden for the future – because what we grow matters. Transform your garden into a self-sustaining haven for nature and wildlife. Ecological garden designer Matt Rees-Warren shares inspirational design ideas and practical projects to help you create a garden that is both beautiful today and sustainable tomorrow. The Ecological Gardener will give you the tools to create an abundant, healthy garden from the soil up – a garden that welcomes birds and bees and allows native planting and wild flowers to flourish, with minimal carbon impact or need for fresh water. This book can guide both novice and experienced gardeners alike in their journey to a more ecological approach, and is full of practical projects and information, including: Finding the right design for your space Creating a wildflower meadow Building rainwater catchments and other tips for water conservation Making compost from kitchen waste, leafmould, compost tea and more Creating a space for wildlife such as hedgehogs, bees and other pollinators Finding beauty in your garden during the winter Matt will show you how to reimagine how you garden, working with nature instead of controlling it, to create a space that promotes both wildlife and beauty. Trade Review‘Engaging and quirky; full of ideas and inspiration for garden projects that you’ll be itching to try for yourself.’—Dave Goulson, author of The Garden Jungle‘Finally, a book for UK gardeners who recognise the desperate need to share their gardens with nature. In The Ecological Gardener, Matt Rees-Warren explains why every square inch of planet Earth, including our gardens, has ecological significance, and he tells us exactly how to increase that significance in ways that will benefit us all. Excellent, timely, essential!’—Douglas W. Tallamy, author of Nature’s Best Hope‘Matt Rees-Warren has distilled his experience, observation and passion for the natural world into an incredibly informative narrative, with practical examples to help us tread lightly on the land. Gardens are for people, but in our endeavour to create beauty, we forget that our space is shared with cohabitants and time. Matt takes us through the garden with an ecological lens – just what we need to view a future that is in harmony with nature itself.’—Arit Anderson, garden designer, chartered member of The Landscape Institute‘Gardening for nature shouldn’t be a radical act, but it takes courage to trade power tools and pesticides for hand tools and native plants. The Ecological Gardener helps you brave the rewilding of your own patch through practical, inspirational advice for growing lightly on the land. With Matt Rees-Warren and the natural world as your guides, you can welcome all your wild neighbors, from slugs to the newts who eat them, to your life-sustaining space.’—Nancy Lawson, author of The Humane Gardener‘Gardening fads and styles come and go, from topiaries to green walls to Tropicalisimo. Yet the arc of understanding what a garden is slowly bends to the less controlled and naturally friendly. As our understanding of the connectedness and mostly concealed weave and warp of “life entire” gains steam, so too does our desire to fully embrace the whole. Within this context, Matt Rees-Warren does an admirable job in explaining the objectives while providing the garden-maker a satisfyingly readable map from which to find one’s personal paradise that welcomes the natural world into our own backyard.’—Daniel J. Hinkley, author of Windcliff and The Explorer’s Garden"The accompanying narrative is what sets this book apart; the breadth and depth of Rees-Warren’s experience allows him reflections that result in a philosophical exploration that is far more than just instruction (though the instruction is high quality, too)."—Booklist
£15.00
Profile Books Ltd Tickets for the Ark: From wasps to whales – how
Book SynopsisA NEW SCIENTIST BOOK OF THE YEAR 2022 'A fascinating read for anyone interested in the future of the planet' Adam Hart, author and BBC science presenter Our planet hasn't seen the current rate of extinction since the demise of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, and global conservation efforts are failing to halt this. As a society, we face choices which will determine the fate of Earth's estimated 8.7 million species, including humans. As wildlife declines, conservation needs to make trade-offs. But what should we conserve and why? Are we wrong to love bees and hate wasps? Are native species more valuable than newcomers (aka invasives)? Should some animals be culled to protect others, and what do we want the 'natural world' to look like? There are many surprising answers in Rebecca Nesbit's lively, stimulating book, which sows the seeds of a debate we urgently need to have.Trade ReviewThought-provoking and topical ... an illuminating analysis of where human efforts may best be directed * Observer *Amazing ... important * Birdwatching *Thought-provoking ... Nesbit challenges some widely held assumptions, many I held myself, and is skillful in doing so ... a welcome antidote to the simplistic and divisive thinking that can sometimes taint the well-meaning world of conservation. -- Katie Burton * Geographical *Conservation often requires tough decisions. Rebecca Nesbit takes an entertaining and unflinching look at one of the toughest decisions of all - what do we save if we can't save everything. A fascinating read for anyone interested in the future of the planet -- Adam Hart, author and BBC science presenterPraise for Rebecca Nesbit: Clear-headed and with a strictly fact-based view of the issue, it highlights the complexities inherent in understanding the multiple ways in which plant genetic engineering can and has been used in the real world. If you want to get beyond post-truth on the issue of GMOs, Nesbit's book is a great place to start -- Mark LynasTickets for the Ark expertly navigates us through innumerable conservation dilemmas, trilemmas and quadrillemas, and forces us to contemplate our own underlying assumptions about the natural world. Why do we want to protect wildlife, for whom, and how can we reach agreement when entirely reasonable people take differing perspectives? -- Chris Thomas, author * Inheritors of the Earth *Tickets for the Ark answers crucial questions that it hadn't occurred to most of us even to ask -- Ken Thompson, author * Where Do Camels Belong? *Makes you question why you care about the things you care about - and why you don't care about things you should ... a fantastic way to explore a range of really difficult questions faced by those who want to conserve the natural world -- Tom Ireland, editor * Biologist *
£13.49
Lexington Books Dwellings of Enchantment: Writing and
Book SynopsisDwellings of Enchantment: Writing and Reenchanting the Earth offers ecocritical and ecopoetic readings that focus on multispecies dwellings of enchantment and reenchant our rapport with the more-than-human world. It sheds light on the marvelous entanglements between humans and other life forms coexisting with us–entanglements that, when fully perceived, call onto humans to shift perspectives on both the causes and solutions to current ecological crises. Working against the disenchantment of humans’ relationships with and perceptions of the world entailed by a modern ontology, this book illustrates the power of ecopoetics to attune humans to the vibrant matter both within and outside of us. Braiding indigenous with non-indigenous worldviews, this book tackles ecopoetics emerging from varying locations in the world. It underscores the postmodernist, remythologizing processes going on in many ecopoetic texts, via magical realist modes and mythopoeia.
£999.99
Wild Goose Publications Field with a View: Science and faith in a time of
Book SynopsisKatharine Preston challenges us to think more deeply about the human condition and our choices in this time of ever-increasing climate disturbance. Moved by the landscapes surrounding her home, Wild Orchard Farm, and drawing on both her ecological and theological training, she writes for scientists leery of faith, people of faith who know and love the miracles of science, and anybody who shares the vision of the planet as a sacred community. Katharine studied anthropology as an undergraduate at Brandeis University, learning from indigenous American cultures about the place of humans in the natural world. She went on to gain a Master's in Forest Science from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and a Master's of Divinity from Andover Newton Theological School. She and her husband, John Bingham, live in Essex, New York and are active associates of the Iona Community. Fascinating theological reflection grounded in the real world, and in the greatest crisis of our time on earth. I'm so glad someone is asking these questions. Bill McKibben Author Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out?There will be more books like this. There have to be. But read this one now, and be uplifted by Katharine's sense of wonder, fed by her scientific and theological literacy, her experiential reasoning, and her realistic and timely passion for the Earth and all its creatures in this, our age of accelerating climate crisis. David ColemanEnvironmental Chaplain with Eco-Congregation Scotland
£999.99
De Gruyter Libraries Driving Education for Sustainable
Book Synopsis
£81.90
Diplomica Verlag Traubentrester als Bodenverbesserer. Kreislaufwirtschaft im Weinbau Wie Pressrückstände Bodenleben und struktur nachhaltig verbessern
£29.32
The University of Chicago Press Terrestrial Ecosystems Through Time Evolutionary
Book SynopsisA survey of the entire ecological history of life on land--from the earliest traces of terrestrial organisms over 400 million years ago to the beginning of human agriculture.
£47.50
The University of Chicago Press Phylogeny Ecology and Behavior A Research Program
Book SynopsisA rigorous integration of phylogenetic hypotheses into studies of adaptation, adaptive radiation, and coevolution in evolutionary biology.
£34.20
The University of Chicago Press A Natural History of the New World
Book SynopsisThe paleoecological history of the Americas is as complex as the region is broad: stretching from the Arctic Circle to Tierra del Fuego, it features some of the most extraordinary vegetation on the planet. With plants as his scientific muse, the author traces the evolution of ecosystems, beginning from the Late Cretaceous period onwards.
£112.10
The University of Chicago Press A Natural History of the New World The Ecology
Book SynopsisThe paleoecological history of the Americas is as complex as the region is broad: stretching from the Arctic Circle to Tierra del Fuego, it features some of the most extraordinary vegetation on the planet. With plants as his scientific muse, the author traces the evolution of ecosystems, beginning from the Late Cretaceous period onwards.
£42.75
The University of Chicago Press The Invention of Religion in Japan Emersion
Book Synopsis
£24.00
The University of Chicago Press Modeling Nature
Book SynopsisA history of population ecology which traces two generations of science and scientists from the opening of the 20th century through to 1970. The text chronicles the careers of key figures and the field's theoretical, empirical and institutional development.
£30.40
The University of Chicago Press Phylogenetic Ecology
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£33.25
The University of Chicago Press Foundations of Ecology
Book Synopsis
£40.00