Die Macht des Wetters: Wie das Klima die Geschichte verändert
Brian M. Fagan
0 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 3491724457
ISBN13:
Language: German
Publish: May 1, 2001
Ancient HistoryAnthropologyArchaeologyClimate ChangeEnvironmentHistoryNatural HistoryNonfictionPopular ScienceScience
The Earth’s climate has always been in glacial periods and warm ones have slowly and relentlessly alternated for millennia. But the period of global warming of the last 15,000 years is without precedent, and it set the conditions which enabled civilization to arise. It is our ‘long summer’. From the almost unimaginably hostile climate of the late Ice to the onset of ‘Little Ice Age’, which began in 1315 and lasted half a millennium, this book tells the remarkable story of how human history has been influenced by the planet’s ever-changing climate. Brian Fagan deploys all the resources of the new climatology to reveal the complex interplay between human development and the weather. He shows that human beings have proved themselves to be at their most resilient and adaptable when the Earth’s volatile climate has posed the greatest severe droughts in southwestern Asia, the drying of the Sahara brought cattle people to the Nile Valley with their distinctive ideas of leadership, and the ripple effects of the Medieval Warm Period had very different and profound impacts in Europe and the Americas. Confronted with such challenges, our ancestors time and again rose to meet