Science, the growth of reliable knowledge, became a major triumph of the European Enlightenment in the seventeenth century, under the guise of 'natural philosophy': investigating what the earth and universe are made of and how things work. It took another century for the parallel subject ‘natural history’ to glimpse how the earth, its geography and its richly diverse life came to be. Later, geology and biology became intertwined as biogeohistory—an ever-changing environmental theatre hosting an ever-changing evolutionary play.
This environmental theatre has shifted with the making and breaking of supercontinents, the birth and death of global oceans, and the rise and fall of global hothouses and ice ages. The evolutionary play begins with biostratigraphy, wherein fossils revealed deep time and ancient environments and built the first meaningful geological timescale, and ends with the still young science of palaeoceanography—central to which are microfossils, rich in information about the oceans and climates of the past.
In Southern Limestones under Western Eyes, Brian McGowran recounts the history of biogeohistory itself: the ever-changing perceptions of rocks, fossils and landscapes, from the late 1600s to the present. McGowran’s focus is southern Australia, the north shore of the dying Australo-Antarctic Gulf, in an era bracketed by two catastrophes: the extinction of dinosaurs and the emergence of humans.
By:
Brian McGowran
Imprint: ANU Press
Country of Publication: Australia
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Spine: 30mm
Weight: 812g
ISBN: 9781760465872
ISBN 10: 1760465879
Pages: 432
Publication Date: 05 September 2023
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
List of figures and tables Preface: Discovering biogeohistory Introduction Précis: If you must leave early … What are rock relationships? Discovering earth history and calibrating deep time Exploration and organic evolution Microfossils: Ultimate archives of biogeohistory Drilled ocean and drifting continent The great transformation and the last greenhouse The Palaeogene Australo-Antarctic Gulf: Tropical swamps in winter darkness Farewell, hothouse and farewell, Australo-Antarctic Gulf Hello, Southern Ocean: Into the arid zone and into the Early Neogene Contingency, consilience and historicity are the guts of biogeohistory Epilogue: Eternal tensions revisited Abbreviations Glossary References