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Monitoring Volcanoes in the North Pacific: Observations from Space (Springer Praxis Books / Geophysical Sciences)
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Supervolcano: The Catastrophic Event That Changed the Course of Human History (Could Yellowstone be Next?)

Supervolcano: The Catastrophic Event That Changed the Course of Human History (Could Yellowstone be Next?)

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Authors: John Savino, Marie D. Jones
Publisher: New Page Books
Category: Book

List Price: $17.99
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New (23) Used (14) from $6.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 71508

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 287
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.7

ISBN: 1564149536
Dewey Decimal Number: 551.21
EAN: 9781564149534
ASIN: 1564149536

Publication Date: August 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: . Free giftwrap upon request. Brand new, not a used item. Will upgrade to expedited mail within US when ordering any 2 items from us.

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Approximately 75,000 years ago, an event occurred that almost wiped out human life. According to a stunning new theory, this singular event may also have completely altered the genetic evolution of humankind. It was an event that released 3,000 times the energy of Mt. St. Helens.

The new book, Supervolcano, explores this eruption of the Toba supervolcano in Sumatra, Indonesia, its far-reaching impact, and the strong possibility of another supervolcano eruption in our lifetime.

Supervolcanoes are considered one of the five biggest threats to humankind, along with asteroids, nuclear war, disease, and global warming. But of those, supervolcanoes are the only threat that cannot be prevented.

And their effects are catastrophic. So devastating was the Toba eruption and the sheer amount of ash it released into the atmosphere, it altered the global climate for years, creating a mini Ice Age that obliterated massive amounts of plant, animal, and human life. A new theory claims this earth-shattering event also caused a severe "population bottleneck" in humans, leading to the eventual extinction of all other branches of our species with the exception of one...the branch that survived Toba and became modern humans.

Supervolcano will explore:
-What supervolcanos are, where they are found, and why they are so deadly to life on earth.
-Toba, the largest of the known supervolcanoes in the past 27 million years, and how its catastrophic environmental aftermath brought humanity to the brink of extinction.
-How genetic, geological, and computer studies show that each human today is related to a survivor of Toba.
-How we can prepare for the next supervolcano, which many earth scientists believe could be right here in our own backyard--Yellowstone National Park. And why they believe an eruption at Yellowstone could be as catastrophic for humanity as Toba.



Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars "Supervolcano"   August 13, 2008
Absolutely fascinating book. Could have been edited more closely - some sentences and paragraphs were not clearly written and caused "hiccups" in the reading. Not enough information on the "Supervolcano Toba" and its effects on human population, but really good book, anyway.


2 out of 5 stars A great plot, but clumsily written   July 7, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book has a very interesting story to tell - and it almost does.

Unfortunately it is lined with boring repetitions - usually of the same punchlines, which was already written on the back of the cover. The chapters and devision of subjects is relevant and well-chosen, but many of the chapters themselves are messy and lack a stringent train of thought. Sometimes the explanations of study methods or other phenomena are simply so obscure that I don't even think the authours got the point.

I love all the references to sources of information throughout the text, but it also makes the text less fluent and sometimes hard to follow.

Lastly the ending was way to American (which is NOT a compliment!). Someone should definitely tell the authour of the last three chapters that America is neither the ruler nor the center of the Earth.

So, what did I get from reading this book: Some fascinating ideas and some references for further study, but a really confusing reading experience.



4 out of 5 stars A very interesting book about a remote, but dangerous threat.   March 28, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is the first well-researched, well-written volume I have seen on supervolcanoes, i.e., resurgent ash-flow calderas. These monsters do not make conical mountains, but scatter ash and other pyroclastic debris over thousand of square kilometers, change climate and incoming solar radiation, and can wipe out species and civilizations in an instant.

The present book discusses these phenomena as well as recent large scale eruptions in the near past, such as Thera, Crater Lake, and Tambora, for purposes of comparison. This is necessary, inasmuch as record-keeping people have been fortunate enough never to experience a true supereruption. It does appear that mankind was nearly driven to extinction by the Toba supervolcanic eruption in 74,000 B.P., however, and much of the book is laudably devoted to an excellent collection of information on this event, and what its repetition, either at Toba or elsewhere, would portend for our civilization. The news is far from encouraging.

My only complaint about the book is the poor reproduction of the black and white photographs. Much important detail that would have greatly aided the written presentation is just simply missing or greatly disotrted. There are no color photographs.

However, the written presentation is superb. The book is filled with interesting details that follow well as a unit. Especially apt is the notation that the largest ash flow caldera known, La Garita, is located in Colorado. FORTUNATELY, that one is extinct.

The book closes worth a narrative of a hypothetical supereruption of Californi's active Long Valley Caldera in 2015, which largely destroys the Southwest and ruins agriculture in the Great Plains.
The supereruption is comparively small on the scale of such things, but still wipes out the U.S. as a global power.

As the authors correctly observe, the odds of a supervolcano erupting in any given year, or even in our lifetime are quite small, so it doesn't pay to stay up worrying about them doing so. Since such a happening COULD occur, and could not be stopped or modified, such places as Yellowstone, Long Valley, Valles in New Mexio, and Taupo in New zealand should be zealously monitored to minimize effects where possible.

Any volcano buff should definitely get this book and put in a distinct place in his or her library. Highly recommended.



5 out of 5 stars my favorite earth-science book!   January 7, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I was fascinated with earth science ever since my first encounter with it, especially when I had a class in it before HIgh School.
This is a great book! Chock full of fun information as well as necessary info (without being alarmist).
I really enjoyed reading it, and so I highly recommend it.



5 out of 5 stars Cataclysmic evolution volcanos   October 4, 2007
 5 out of 6 found this review helpful

SUPERVOLCANO - The CATASTOPHIC Event That Changed the Course OF Human History. by John Savino & Marie Jones. New Page, '07
review by Micheal Sunanda. Pt 1,

I lived on Kilauea volcano a decade seeing red hot lava flowing into the sea there & hiked into its dormant crater 3 times, both very exciting & studying volcanoes first hand. I head the authors on Coast to Coastam talk show, so charming i got the book. Finally a new in-deep earth science geology book about monster volcanoes expanding our awareness of Cataclysmic Evolution now with many smaller earth changes happening simultaneously. Volcanoes are earth's most suddenly creative hot explosive scary event & place making land, gases & ash blowing far & near, even causing mass extinction in history of earth's evolution. The authors compare big eruptions of last 50 years, are small compared to Toba supervolcano' in Sumatra, Indonesia 75K years ago, They use Toba & Mt St Helens radically contrasting the global shock waves of past & possible coming supervolcano eruption. SV explains many kinds of big & super-volcanoes.
This very readable, dramatic, comprehensive? & scientific text has some charts & B/W illustrations: showing craters, fault-lines, destruction, trends & 6 types of volcanoes: flood or plateau, shield V; cinder cone, composite or strato V; V cone & caldera". Also under sea V & fault-line eruptions. They present a new theory of evolution `the BOTTLECK' - explaining how human life was nearly erased & few survived on earth after Toba Supervolcano. Also other extinctions were caused by super-volcanoes, that could happen again?!



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