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Europe : The First 100 Million Years

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1,200.00 ৳


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Europe : The First 100 Million Years

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A place of exceptional diversity, rapid change and high energy, for the past 100 million years Europe has literally been at the crossroads of the world: ever since the interaction of Asia, North America and Africa formed the tropical island archipelago that would become the continent of today. In this unprecedented evolutionary history, Tim Flannery shows how Europe has absorbed wave after wave of immigrant species ever since; taking them in, transforming them and sometimes hybridising them. Flannery reveals how, in addition to playing a vital role in the evolution of our own species, Europe was once the site of the formation of the first Coral briefs, the home of some of the world's largest elephants and now has more wolves than North America.

Tim Flannery

Tim Flannery (born 28 January 1956) is an Australian mammalogist, palaeontologist, environmentalist, conservationist, explorer, and public scientist. He has discovered more than 30 mammal species (including new species of tree kangaroos. He served as the Chief Commissioner of the Climate Commission, a Federal Government body providing information on climate change to the Australian public before the Commission was abolished by the Abbott Government as its first act of government. On 23 September 2013, Flannery announced that he would join other sacked commissioners to form the independent Climate Council, that would be funded entirely by the community, and continue to provide independent climate science to the Australian public. Flannery is a professorial fellow at the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, University of Melbourne. Flannery was named Australian Humanist of the Year in 2005, and Australian of the Year in 2007. Until mid-2013 he was a professor at Macquarie University and held the Panasonic Chair in Environmental Sustainability. He was also chairman of the Copenhagen Climate Council, an international group of business and other leaders that coordinated a business response to climate change and assisted the Danish government in the lead up to COP 15. In 2015, the Jack P. Blaney Award for Dialogue recognized Tim Flannery for using dialogue and authentic engagement to build global consensus for action around climate change. His views on shutting down conventional coal-fired power stations for electricity generation in the medium term are frequently cited in the media.

Title

Europe : The First 100 Million Years

Author

Tim Flannery

Category

  • History
  • A place of exceptional diversity, rapid change and high energy, for the past 100 million years Europe has literally been at the crossroads of the world: ever since the interaction of Asia, North America and Africa formed the tropical island archipelago that would become the continent of today. In this unprecedented evolutionary history, Tim Flannery shows how Europe has absorbed wave after wave of immigrant species ever since; taking them in, transforming them and sometimes hybridising them. Flannery reveals how, in addition to playing a vital role in the evolution of our own species, Europe was once the site of the formation of the first Coral briefs, the home of some of the world's largest elephants and now has more wolves than North America.
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