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Brave New Arctic

The Untold Story of the Melting North

Mark C. Serreze

$38.95

Paperback

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English
Princeton University Press
12 May 2020
An insider account of how scientists unraveled the mystery of the thawing Arctic

In the 1990s, researchers in the Arctic noticed that floating summer sea ice had begun receding. This was accompanied by shifts in ocean circulation and unexpected changes in weather patterns throughout the world. The Arctic's perennially frozen ground, known as per

By:  
Imprint:   Princeton University Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 140mm, 
ISBN:   9780691202655
ISBN 10:   0691202656
Series:   Science Essentials
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Mark C. Serreze is Director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center, Distinguished Professor of Geography, and Fellow of the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He is the coauthor of The Arctic Climate System.

Reviews for Brave New Arctic: The Untold Story of the Melting North

[Serreze] shares the story of how he entered the field of climate science by accident; why, at first, he thought the climate might be getting colder rather than warmer, based on measurements from complicated Arctic weather systems; how, year after year, he became further convinced about the reality of global warming due to slowly accumulating data; and why he began to participate avidly in a scientific consensus combating climate-change deniers, most of whom have been politically motivated. Ultimately, what Serreze produces is a kind of detective story; the major crime is the human causation of global warming. . . . An alarming, evidence-based book by a scientist who is not by nature an alarmist. --Kirkus Serreze provides an arresting account of the history of climate science, written by someone who saw it all unfold before his own eyes. If you thought you had heard it all, think again, and read this book. --The Inquisitive Biologist Serreze does a great job of explaining the science, from complex to the most basic concepts. ---Kate Gardner, Physics World What Serreze offers is a scientific detective story that shows how researchers found their way to the inevitable conclusion that the Arctic humanity has known for many centuries is gone forever, and that a new Arctic is taking its place. . . . We are living in the Anthropocene, and as Serreze shows with this brief bet detailed book, today's Arctic is proof. ---David James, Anchorage Daily News [Serreze] has also written a farewell to ice. In Brave New Arctic, he relates that when he first started out in polar research, in the early eighties, he was taken with the idea of global cooling. 'Deep down I was hoping for an ice age, ' he confesses. . . . Years passed, the ice continued to melt, and Serreze came to favor fire. 'The weight of evidence turned me, ' he observes. 'And then I turned hard.' He gives the perennial sea ice until 2030 or so. 'That the Arctic Ocean will become free of sea ice in late summer and early autumn is a given, ' he writes. ---Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker [Brave New Arctic] sounds a clarion call about the global consequences of a melting north. . . . At times the book has the feeling of a suspenseful detective novel, with dedicate scientist protagonists trying to beat the clock against impending environmental disaster, all the while battling self-interested political and corporate actors who lust after 'resources' that can more easily be extracted from an ice-free zone and who threaten important research work with lawsuits and funding cuts. At other times, there is a melancholy tone as the author elegizes with past observations of a frozen landscape that will never be the same again. --Foreword Reviews [A] fascinating book about how researchers came to understand Arctic warming and its causes. . . . As he documents this process, Serreze doesn't shy away from the failures of the Arctic research community, including his own. Particularly interesting are the mea culpas from Serreze and fellow scientists who chased scientific red herrings or, deafened by the din of natural climate variability, misread the data. The Arctic, Serreze writes, 'tells no lies.' But its truth can be hard to discern. ---Ashley Shelby, New York Times Book Review Without the strong research on the Arctic led by people like Serreze, we would be flying blind into what could be a very dangerous future. ---Tim Flannery, New York Review of Books [Brave New Arctic] delves into the recent history of Arctic research, following a trail of scientific breadcrumbs from the late 1970s to the present day to show how our understanding of the region's response to climate and climate change has evolved over time. . . . Serreze succeeds on one important front: humanizing Arctic science. He tells anecdotes about his research and the people he's worked with. He portrays scientists whose work he discusses as regular people. --Science An insightful and entertaining read. Serreze has a gift for writing eloquently and colorfully from the trenches of scientific research. --John E. Walsh, coauthor of Severe and Hazardous Weather Distinguished scientist Mark Serreze provides an engaging history of how a true skeptic came to understand the human role in the changing Arctic, and how he contributed to that new knowledge. --Richard B. Alley, author of The Two-Mile Time Machine: Ice Cores, Abrupt Climate Change, and Our Future No one knows ice better than Mark Serreze. In Brave New Arctic, he explains how climate change is transforming the polar North and why this matters to all of us. --Elizabeth Kolbert, author of The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History Serreze provides a wealth of important findings and perspectives from his decades of work in the high North and polar regions. --Robert W. Corell, Global Environment and Technology Foundation Brave New Arctic is well written, engaging, and informative. In detailing his personal journey, Serreze gives readers a wonderful feel for the progress of Arctic science over the past few decades. --Claire L. Parkinson, polar researcher Serreze gives an engaging insider's view of the struggle to understand the causes of the observed changes in the Arctic, describing how he and the broader research community came to recognize that these profound changes are a result of human impacts on the climate. --Robert Max Holmes, Woods Hole Research Center Climatologist Mark Serreze provides a front-row seat to the unprecedented changes in the Arctic over the past three decades and the science behind our emerging understanding of their causes and consequences. Brave New Arctic is a gripping firsthand account by a scientist who saw it happen. --Jane Lubchenco, Oregon State University, former administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration


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