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- BOOK REVIEW
-
- by Yves Barbero
-
- COSMIC CATASTROPHES
- by Clark R. Chapman and David Morrison
- 302 pp., including a glossary and index.
- (Plenum $22.95)
-
- Finally, a truly useful summary concerning celestial events
- for those of us who have little or no math and even less
- formal scientific training. And in well written English to
- boot.
-
- For years, I've been catching a newspaper article here and a
- longer magazine piece there. Occasionally, they were
- excellent expositions but more often than not, they were
- written by a bored reporter or a scholar with an ax to grind
- or in a language only he and a dozen or so peers could
- understand.
-
- What was needed is finally provided by the Chapman/Morrison
- book. Cosmic Catastrophes covers all the bases, impacts
- from space, the death of dinosaurs, nuclear winter, the new
- science [sic] of chaos, the origin of the moon, colliding
- worlds, comets, craters, climates, the greenhouse effect,
- ozone layers, supernovas (a particular delight was reading
- what the 1987 supernova in the Southern Hemisphere meant
- insofar as scientific theories were concerned) and the death
- of the Sun.
-
- The book also provides an excellent thumb-nail history of the
- uniformitarianism verses catastrophism debate over the past
- few hundred years, something few lay readers get an insight
- of except those of us strange enough to regularly read
- Stephen Jay Gould in Natural History magazine.
-
- Yes, they do cover "scientific" creationist claims in
- some detail and our old friend, Immanuel Velikovsky, is
- analyzed as an example of "catastrophism gone wild."
- The book even covers other fringe catastrophism notions,
- including one very popular at the time of Nazi Germany when
- academic ("Jewish") science was rejected. Fringe science is
- not always just merely silly. It's sometimes dangerous.
-
- The book is thorough, provides an useful glossary, is written
- for the intelligent layman, seems biased for ecological
- concerns (atmospheric warming is well covered), insists on
- the scientific approach and even names names. It's an ideal
- book to give to a bright kid or a discerning adult. I can
- find little to fault it except that I would have liked to see
- it longer.
-