A Farewell to Ice
A Farewell to Ice book cover

A Farewell to Ice

Hardcover – International Edition, February 28, 2017

Price
$21.17
Format
Hardcover
Pages
256
Publisher
Allen Lane
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0241009413
Dimensions
6.35 x 0.99 x 9.47 inches
Weight
1.16 pounds

Description

Peter Wadhams is the UK's most experienced sea ice scientist. He was Director of the Scott Polar Institute in Cambridge from 1987 to 1992 and Professor of Ocean Physics at Cambridge from 1992 to 2015. He has made more than 50 expeditions to both polar regions, working from ice camps, icebreakers, aircraft, and, uniquely, Royal Navy submarines (making six submerged voyages to the North Pole). His research group in Cambridge has been the only UK group with the capacity to carry out field work on sea ice. He has also held visiting professorships at the National Institute of Polar Research, Tokyo, the US Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, the University of Washington, Seattle and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla. Peter Wadhams has been awarded the W.S. Bruce Prize of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1977), the UK Polar Medal (1987) and the Italgas Prize for Environmental Sciences (1990). He is an Associate Professor at the Laboratoire d'Océanographie de Villefranche, and a Professor at the Università Politecnica delle Marche, Ancona. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and a Member of the Finnish Academy.

Features & Highlights

  • Farewell to Ice

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(151)
★★★★
25%
(63)
★★★
15%
(38)
★★
7%
(18)
-7%
(-18)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Please read this book.

I've been lucky to have met Peter - a fantastically brilliant and honest man. You'd think a professor of math at Cambridge University would be aloof. Not Peter. He is so congenial yet strongly passionate about getting the message out about the dramatic and devastating impacts climate change is already wreaking across the arctic. Farewell to ice, but also farewell to the Gulf Stream, the Outer Banks, Florida, Manhattan, Tuvalu... and somewhere down the line, life as you know it for you.
2 people found this helpful
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like the Great Barrier Reef

Far from sight, but at the forefront of the impacts of climate change, the Arctic, like the Great Barrier Reef, is unequivocally in terminal decline. This powerful book uncompromisingly paints a chilling perspective on global warming as it is occuring in the far north of this planet, carefully outlining the basic physics driving it.
2 people found this helpful
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Best summary of Arctic climate research.

Wadhams makes an air-tight case that we are already in a climate emergency. He uses his own research gained from many scientific projects in the Arctic. He may be the best source of knowledge on Arctic amplification and positive feedback effects. He also concludes with a prescription of carbon capture and possibly geoengineering. Everyone who is concerned about climate needs to read this book.
2 people found this helpful
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Time is running out

Maybe the most important book you've never heard of. While we as a planet are still embroiled in 19th-century style gunboat diplomacy, or struggling to out-consume our neighbors, this book serves as a wake-up call for the entire human race. We ignore the author's message (of hothouse Earth) at our peril. Every legislator in our country should be reading this book, and acting according to the guidelines of sound ecological principles, rather than having their palms greased by self-serving, and horribly naive, lobbyists. We can take the steps of zero-emissions of greenhouse gases, and hopefully find a way to sequester existing CO2 and methane, or there appears little prospect of avoiding ecological and societal collapse. Our continuing casual attitude about imminent climate disaster seems more a manifestation of deep denial; one could almost say a collective suicide wish.
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Finally...

... about time he wrote a book...