‘Amid all the ranting, confusing, and contradicting books on climate change, at last here’s one that does something truly useful: Clearly and engagingly, scientist Curt Stager guides us into back into the atmosphere’s history, letting us compare it to the present and draw informed ideas about what to expect in the future. It’s heartening to know that he expects us to have one.'
Alan Weisman, author, The World Without Us
In this major new book, paleoclimatologist Curt Stager vividly shows how what we do to the environment in the 21st century will affect the next 100,000 years of life on this planet.
Most of us have accepted that our planet is warming and that we’ve played the key role in causing climate change. Yet few of us realise the magnitude of what’s happened. The course we take will affect our civilisation and the planet for millennia. What will that world look like? Curt Stager draws on the planet’s geological history to provide a view of where we may be headed. That future is far different from anything anyone has ever seen before.
In the long run, the greatest threat to humans will not be global warming, but global cooling. Just when that ‘climate whiplash’ happens is entirely up to us. We have already put off the next Ice Age, but whether our descendants will see an ice-free Arctic, miles of submerged coasts, or an acidified ocean still remains to be decided. Stager shows us how vastly different the world will be if we continue to pollute or if we rein ourselves in for the sake of future generations.
Like the bestsellers The World Without Us and The Next 100 Years, this book offers a new perspective that will change the way climate sceptics, activists, and everyone in between think about what we’re doing to our planet.
‘extraordinary’
Tim Flannery, Weekend Australian
A ‘… fascinating read. It should be compulsory reading for political and industrial leaders.’
Sun Herald
» All reviews for this title‘A book that will change the way climate skeptics, activists and everyone in between thinks’
G magazine