Adventures in Volcanoland
What Volcanoes Tell Us About the World and Ourselves
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- $20.99
Publisher Description
*A Library Journal Best Book of 2024*
A mix of memoir, travel and popular science, charting journeys across deserts, through jungles and up ice caps, to some of the most important volcanoes around the world
In this captivating book from one of the most influential geochemists in the field, Tamsin Mather takes us along on her globe-spanning excursions from Nicaragua to Hawaii, Santorini to Ethiopia and beyond. With warmth and lyricism, she explores the cultural roles volcanoes play throughout history, and the growing and evolving science behind their formation and eruptions.
Adventures in Volcanoland is an urgent and poetic exploration into the world's most mysterious geological mountains and how they make and shape our world.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Mather, an earth sciences professor at Oxford University, debuts with a prosaic deep dive into the science of volcanoes. Expounding on the molecular chemistry of molten rock, Mather explains that silicon and oxygen atoms in magma form larger structures than the "tidy molecular units of water," giving "lava flows a strength and stickiness far greater" than water's. She highlights the fearsome power of major historical eruptions, observing that the 1883 explosion of Krakatau "shattered eardrums on the British ship RMS Norham Castle just 60 kilometres from the volcano" and that the 79 CE eruption of Mount Vesuvius created pumice plumes that "turned day to night as if the gods were at work." Personal anecdotes from Mather's impressive career offer insight into how volcanologists conduct fieldwork, as when she recounts determining that the Pu‘u ‘О‘ō vent in Kīlauea, Hawaii, was at low risk of exploding in 2008 after sampling the chemical composition of its "volcanic smog." Unfortunately, Mather alternates between matter-of-fact scientific discussions and labored descriptions of locales where she's conducted fieldwork (she writes of the Aluto volcano in Ethiopia, "Over the volcano's rim, the topography still feels rough-hewn, with the lobes of multiple previous eruptions building the rugged ramparts in a blocky geological pattern"), struggling to capture the excitement of her subject. Readers would be better off with Clive Oppenheimer's Mountains of Fire.