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Discussions on Climate and Cosmology

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Discussions on Climate and Cosmology Synopsis

The cause of the ice ages was a puzzle to nineteenth-century climatologists. One of the most popular theories was that the affected continents must somehow have been hugely elevated and, like mountains, iced over. However, in this 1885 study of the problem, James Croll (1821–90) argues that such staggering movement would have been impossible. Instead, he puts forward a new theory: that the eccentricity of the earth's orbit changes at regular intervals over long periods, creating 'great secular summers and winters'. Adopting a meticulous approach to the facts, he disproves a host of well-established notions across several disciplines and makes some remarkable deductions, including the effect of ocean currents on climate, the temperature of space, and even the age of the sun. With a focus on logical argument and explanation rather than mathematics, his book remains fascinating and accessible to students in the history of science.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781108055307
Publication date: 21st February 2013
Author: James Croll
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 346 pages
Series: Cambridge Library Collection - Earth Science
Genres: Meteorology and climatology