Adventures
Underground : Volcanoes, Earthquakes, Mines, Quarries, Caves and Peat Beds
by David Falkayn (Editor)
(Paperback -- April 2002)
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About
Hawaii's Volcanoes
by L. R. McBride
Paperback: 48 pages
Petroglyph Pr Ltd; ISBN: 0912180439; Revised edition
(June 1986) |
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Encyclopedia
of Earthquakes and Volcanoes
by David Ritchie, Alexander E., Phd Gates
From aa to Yellowstone, if it's got anything at all to do with earthquakes
or volcanoes, you're likely to find within the pages of this updated encyclopedia
from science journalist David Ritchie and Rutgers geology professor Alexander
Gates.
The 1,000-plus alphabetical listings range from historical volcanoes
and quakes (both famous and obscure) to entries on specific seismic phenomena
(everything from parasitic cones to jökulhlaup) and general geological
principles, including a few excellent in-depth discussions on topics like
plate tectonics and seismic wave types. The encyclopedia also contains
a lengthy bibliography, a list of Internet resources, a chronological listing
of notable quakes and eruptions, and a handful of unforgettable eyewitness
accounts (after the eruption of Vesuvius in A.D. 79, apparently Pliny the
Elder's party went out "having pillows tied upon their heads with napkins;
and this was their whole defense against the storm of stones that fell
around them").
With its clear, newspaper-style entries, the Encyclopedia of Earthquakes
and Volcanoes will be navigable even to geo-newbies, but its a-to-z organization
makes it more useful as a reference than as a stand-alone text. (Then again,
given its liberal cross-referencing, you can easily find yourself led to
a long, enjoyable read.) --Paul Hughes - Amazon.com
Hardcover from Facts on File, Inc.
Book Published: July, 2001
Encyclopedia
of Volcanoes
by Haraldur Sigurdsson, Bruce Houghton, Hazel Rymer, John Stix, Steve
McNutt
Book Description: Volcanoes are unquestionably one of the most
spectacular and awe-inspiring features of the physical world. Our paradoxical
fascination with them stems from their majestic beauty and powerful, if
sometimes deadly, destructiveness. Notwithstanding the tremendous advances
in volcanology since ancient times, some of the mystery surrounding volcanic
eruptions remains today. The Encyclopedia of Volcanoes summarizes our present
knowledge of volcanoes. Through its thematic organization around the melting
of the earth, it provides a comprehensive source of information on the
multidisciplinary influences of volcanic eruptions--both the destructive
as well as the beneficial aspects. The majority of the chapters focus on
the geoscience-related aspects of volcanism (radioactive heat source, melting
rock, ascent of magma, surface phenomena associated with exiting magma,
extraterrestrial volcanism, etc.). In addition, complementary chapters
discuss the multidisciplinary aspects of volcanism; these include the history
of volcanology, geothermal energy resources, interaction with the oceans
and atmosphere, health aspects of volcanism, mitigation of volcanic disasters,
post-eruption ecology, and the impact of eruptions on organismal biodiversity.
In addition to its appeal to educators, students, and professional and
amateur scientists, the Encyclopedia of Volcanoes functions as an important
information resource for administrators and officials responsible for developing
and implementing volcanic hazard mitigation around the world.
Hardcover from Academic Press
Book Published: October, 1999 |
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Fire
in the Sea: The Santorini Volcano: Natural History and the Legend of Atlantis
by Walter L. Friedrich, Alexander R. McBirney
Hardcover: Cambridge Univ Pr (Trd); ISBN: 0521652901;
(July 2000)
Fire
Mountains of the West: The Cascade and Mono Lake Volcanoes
by Stephen L. Harris
Fire
on the Mountain : The Nature of Volcanoes
by Dorian Weisel (Editor), et al
Paperback: 132 pages
Chronicle Books; ISBN: 0811804933; (October 1994)
Hawaii
Volcano Watch : A Pictorial History, 1779-1991
by Thomas L. Wright, et al
(Paperback -- November 1992)
Krakatoa
: The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883
by Simon Winchester
It may seem a stretch to connect a volcanic eruption with civil and
religious unrest in Indonesia today, but Simon Winchester makes a compelling
case. Krakatoa tells the frightening tale of the biggest volcanic eruption
in history using a blend of gentle geology and narrative history. Krakatoa
erupted at a time when technologies like the telegraph were becoming commonplace
and Asian trade routes were being expanded by northern European companies.
This bustling colonial backdrop provides an effective canvas for the suspense
leading up to August 27th, 1883, when the nearby island of Krakatoa would
violently vaporize. Winchester describes the eruption through the eyes
of its survivors, and readers will be as horrified and mesmerized as eyewitnesses
were as the death toll reached nearly 40,000 (almost all of whom died from
tsunamis generated by the unimaginably strong shock waves of the eruption).
Ships were thrown miles inshore, endless rains of hot ash engulfed those
towns not drowned by 100 foot waves, and vast rafts of pumice clogged the
hot sea. The explosion was heard thousands of miles away, and the eruption's
shock wave traveled around the world seven times. But the book's biggest
surprise is not the riveting catalog of the volcano's effects; rather,
it is Winchester's contention that the Dutch abandonment of their Indonesian
colonies after the disaster left local survivors to seek comfort in radical
Islam, setting the stage for a volatile future for the region. --Therese
Littleton - Amazon.com
Hardcover: 432 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.20 x
9.30 x 6.32
Publisher: HarperCollins; (April 1, 2003)
ISBN: 0066212855
Krakatoa
(World Disasters Series)
by Don Nardo, Brian McGovern
from Lucent Books
Surviving
Galeras
by Stanley Williams, Fen Montaigne
On January 14, 1993, Stanley Williams led a party of fellow geologists
up Galeras, a Colombian volcano that, though historically active, had been
lying quiet long enough that they suspected it was due for an episode--and
thus an opportunity for the volcanologists to practice their predicting
skills. As they reached the lip of its great crater, Galeras obliged them
with a vengeance: it erupted in a burst of fire and toxic gas, killing
several members of the party and leaving Williams scorched and broken,
"sprawled on my side, caked in ash and blood, wet from the rain, bones
protruding from my burned clothes, my jaw hanging slackly." Rescued by
two colleagues, Marta Velasco and Patty Mothes, Williams faced several
challenges in the years to come--not only healing his body and exorcising
the ghosts of Galeras, but also contending with other colleagues' whispered
charges that he should have known the mountain was about to blow. But death,
Williams and collaborator Fen Montaigne (Reeling in Russia) write, comes
with the territory. Whenever a volcano has erupted in recent years, it
seems, a volcanologist is among its victims, for, Williams notes, "the
best way to understand a volcano is still, in my opinion, to climb it,"
and to climb it in all of its moods. And those moods, Williams and Montaigne
add, are not easy to forecast, even if earth scientists have developed
ever more accurate ways to predict events such as earthquakes and tsunamis.
At once a study in mountains, the history of geology, and the will to endure,
Surviving Galeras is often terrifying, and altogether memorable. --Gregory
McNamee - Amazon.com
(Hardcover -- April 17, 2001)
FROM
MAGMA TO TEPHRA
by A. Freundt, M. Rosi
(Paperback -- February 1, 2001)
Special Order
Raging
Planet: Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and the Tectonic Threat to Life on Earth
by Bill McGuire
Book Description: Volcanoes, earthquakes, and giant killer tidal waves
called tsunamis . . . We think of these events as disasters, but for Earth
they are merely business as usual. This dramatically illustrated book describes
some of the more than 3,000 active volcanoes scattered around the planet,
and chronicles many of history's most devastating volcanic eruptions, earthquakes,
and tidal waves. The author explains that volcanoes and earthquakes both
result from movement of the Earth's vast tectonic plates, and are most
likely to occur at or near places where two or more plates come together.
Such movement has been going on since the Earth's origins, creating mountain
ranges and dividing the landmass into separate continents. Described in
these pages are volcanic blasts from the past: Vesuvius, Italy in 79 A.D.
... Laki, Iceland in 1783 ... Tambora, Indonesia in 1815 ... Krakatoa,
Indonesia in 1883 ... Mount St. Helens, Washington State in 1980 ... Pinatubo,
the Philippines in 1991, and others. Also chronicled are earthquakes that
have struck large population centers, producing disasters in Lisbon, Portugal,
in 1755, San Francisco in 1906, Tokyo-Yokohama, Japan, in 1923, and Kobe,
Japan, in 1995. The Earth's major trouble spots and likely targets for
future earthquakes are described. Urban areas in greatest danger continue
to be those along the Pacific Rim, which encompasses North America's West
Coast and most of Japan's cities. Here is an intensely readable summary
of natural disasters that have struck the earth, along with informed speculation
on how and when similar events will recur in the future. More than 200
color illustrations.
Paperback from Barrons Educational Series
Book Published: 07 February, 2002
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Volcanology
by Jacques-Marie Bardintzeff, Alexander R. McBirney
(Paperback -- March 2000) |
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Volcanoes
(WLL)
by Peter Clarkson, David Houston
(Paperback -- December 2000) |
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The
Physics of Explosive Volcanic Eruptions (Geological Society Special Publication
Series, 145)
by J. S. Gilbert (Editor), R. S. J. Sparks (Editor)
(Hardcover -- October 1998)
Special Order
Volcano
Cowboys: The Rocky Evolution of a Dangerous Science
by Dick Thompson
Vulcanology is not the sexiest of sciences, despite Hollywood movies
in which clenched-jawed heroes tame ferocious floods of lava that are busily
swallowing up some crowded metropolis or another, racing against the clock
to save humankind from the elements. It turns out that those movies aren't
really so far-fetched, though, and in the pages of Volcano Cowboys the
world's small corps of magma hunters acquire well-deserved élan. The study
of volcanoes, Time magazine writer Dick Thompson notes, is largely an observational
and not theoretical science; where the vital memory of a molecular biologist
"generally drops off after a decade," a vulcanologist will carry reams
of data about the behavior of the earth gleaned from reports stretching
back to the time of Plato and Pliny the Elder, those amateur volcano-watchers
of antiquity. They've had plenty more to do in recent years, though, than
to quote the ancients. Thompson's vigorous narrative begins with the eruption
of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980, an event that U.S. Geological Survey
scientists had been able to predict with some accuracy. They lacked, however,
a coordinated means to effect an evacuation of the area, and 57 people
died. Battling institutional inertia and struggling for funding, teams
of these scientists, the "volcano cowboys" of Thompson's title, set about
trying to develop methods to predict more accurately dangerous volcanic
events and to trim the body count when such events took place. His story
recounts their eventual victory when, in 1991, the Philippine volcano Pinatubo
exploded--but, thanks to the work of these dedicated field scientists,
"less than one quarter of one percent of those at risk had died during
the eruption." Tens of millions of people around the world live within
the reach of volcanoes. Thompson's narrative reveals that the "volcano
cowboys" have made their lives safer--and it's much better than the movies.
--Gregory McNamee - Amazon.com
Hardcover: 336 pages
St. Martin's Press; ISBN: 0312208812; (July 2000)
Volcano
Deformation : New Geodetic Monitoring Techniques
by Daniel Dzurisin
(Hardcover -- April 2002)
Volcanology
and Geothermal Energy (Los Alamos Series in Basic and Applied Sciences,
No 12)
by Kenneth Wohletz, Grant Heiken
(Hardcover -- April 1992)
Summit
Guide to the Cascade Volcanoes
by Jeff Smoot
(Paperback -- January 1997)
Special Order
Santorini
Volcano (Geological Society Special Memoir, 19)
by T. H. Druitt, et al
(Hardcover -- October 1999)
Special Order
Volcanoes
of Europe
by Alwyn Scarth, Jean-Claude Tanguy
(Paperback -- May 2001)
Volcanoes
in America's National Parks
by Robert Decker, Barbara Decker
(Paperback -- August 1, 2001)
Volcanoes
in Human History: The Far-Reaching Effects of Major Eruptions.
by Jelle Zeilinga De Boer, Donald Theodore Sanders
In 1815, Napoleon's armies fell to defeat at Waterloo, a clash that
would change the course of world events. Far more Europeans died that year,
though, as a result of a volcanic explosion in Indonesia--one cataclysmic
eruption among the many that figure in this sidelong view of the Earth's
history. The explosion of Tambora in April 1815, geologists de Boer and
Sanders write, sent a plume of volcanic ash high into the planet's atmosphere,
bringing on a "nuclear winter" that devastated crops in the northern hemisphere,
yielding famine and plague. Moreover, they add, the explosion cast a hazy
pall over much of Europe, a gloom that inspired Mary Shelley to write her
famed novel, Frankenstein. Another explosion, more than 3,000 years earlier,
pulverized the Mediterranean island of Thera, giving rise to the legend
of Atlantis and causing whole civilizations to collapse. Still another
eruption on the island of Tristan da Cunha, in 1961, "brought [the 20th
century] to this most isolated of the earth's inhabited places." The authors'
overview of nature's ability to thwart human intentions makes for fascinating
reading, sure to appeal to fans of Perils of a Restless Planet, Surviving
Galeras, and other chronicles of the trembling earth. --Gregory McNamee
- Amazon.com
(Hardcover -- January 1, 2001)
Volcanoes
: Fire from the Earth (Discoveries)
by Maurice Krafft, Paul Bahn (Translator)
(Paperback -- April 1993)
Fires of the Earth : The Laki Eruption 1783-1784
by Jon Steingrimsson, Keneva Kunz (Translator)
(Hardcover -- December 1998)
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