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English
Oxford University Press
01 May 2004
How did life begin? What was 'snowball earth'?

Why did the dinosaurs become extinct? Are we all descended from 'African Eve'?

Will humans be responsible for the next major extinction? These and many other fundamental questions are addressed in this masterly account of The Story of Life, by eminent biologist and teacher Richard Southwood.

The story unfolds with the formation of the earth around four thousand million years ago. Life first emerged a hundred million years later, and it took another fifteen million years for more complex life-forms to appear.

Periods of relative calm were punctuated by five major extinctions, with innumerable minor jolts along the way. Then, five million years ago, an able ape evolved that gradually came to dominate and control the other animals and plants.

The future now lies in the hands of this single species, Homo sapiens.

In this carefully crafted story, Southwood's love of his subject, and for the life he describes, shines through, to engage and inform scientist and general reader alike.

By:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 233mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   421g
ISBN:   9780198607861
ISBN 10:   0198607865
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for The Story of Life

Eminent scientist Professor Southwood has written a definitive text on the history of life from its beginnings in the chemical soup to the present day. One might expect such a book to be dense and unreadable, so broad is its sweep and so complex the issues involved, but one would be wrong. Although the book's material was originally directed at life sciences students, it is beautifully clear and so very readable that it deserves a place in every household. We all have a rough knowledge of evolution and perhaps think not a lot more can be said about it. Southwood's talent is to make this knowledge relevant to us, and to the seismic shifts in the environment we see around us today. Species have emerged, and disappeared, and we, too, are a species which may suffer the same fate. For dinosaur lovers, the book provides many fascinating revelations - for instance, dinosaurs were neither warm- nor cold-blooded, but a mixture of both, with biological systems unlike any other animal. In the context of a particular species and its impact on the environment, Southwood cites the effects of lead and chemicals upon our biology and the contribution humanity has made to increased carbon dioxide levels. The stress of population explosion coupled with the scarcity of natural resources leads to political instability. In the final chapter of the book Southwood asks whether we have the ability to deal with the monsters we have created - or whether they will be our doom and, as a result, sound the death knell for the human race as we know it. (Kirkus UK)


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