Making Eden, David Beerling
Making Eden, David Beerling
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Making Eden
How Plants Transformed a Barren Planet

Author: David Beerling

Narrator: Shaun Grindell

Unabridged: 8 hr 54 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/28/2019


Synopsis

Over 7 billion people depend on plants for healthy, productive, secure lives, but few of us stop to consider the origin of the plant kingdom that turned the world green and made our lives possible. And as the human population continues to escalate, our survival depends on how we treat the plant kingdom and the soils that sustain it. Understanding the evolutionary history of our land floras, the story of how plant life emerged from water and conquered the continents to dominate the planet, is fundamental to our own existence.

In Making Eden David Beerling reveals the hidden history of Earth's sun-shot greenery, and considers its future prospects as we farm the planet to feed the world. Describing the early plant pioneers and their close, symbiotic relationship with fungi, he examines the central role plants play in both ecosystems and the regulation of climate. As threats to plant biodiversity mount today, Beerling discusses the resultant implications for food security and climate change, and how these can be avoided. Drawing on the latest exciting scientific findings, including Beerling's own field work in the U.K., North America, and New Zealand, and his experimental research programs over the past decade, this is an exciting new take on how plants greened the continents.

About David Beerling

David Beerling is Sorby Professor of Natural Sciences and Director of the Leverhulme Centre for Climate Change Mitigation at the University of Sheffield. Before this he held a Royal Society University Research Fellowship, where his work on the evolution of life and the physical environment was recognised by the award of the prestigious Philip Leverhulme Prize in earth sciences in 2001. He has published numerous articles in academic journals and is the author of two books: Vegetation and the Terrestrial Carbon Cycle (with Ian Woodward) and The Emerald Planet. The latter formed the basis of a major three-part BBC Two television series, How to Grow a Planet. He was elected to the Fellowship of the Royal Society, London, in 2014.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Brian

I'll be honest up front - I found parts of Making Eden hard work to read. But the effort was more than rewarded. David Beerling makes a good case that botany is unfairly seen as the Cinderella of biology - it simply doesn't get the same attention as the animal side. I realised how true this was when......more

Goodreads review by Gendou

I don't know who this book is for. It makes the fatal mistake of flip-flopping between highly technical and condescendingly lay. Sometimes technical jargon that even I have never heard of (shock!) is thrown around without any introduction or explanation right in the middle of a sentence that basical......more

Goodreads review by Bill

This is really two books in one. At a more general level, Beerling describes the development of land plants and their significance to the world. He takes this further, though, and relates what has been discovered about the evolution of genes specific to various plant functions. The author traces the......more

Strangers on the Shore: Looking at our verdant and crowded world of today it’s hard to imagine the barren, empty, landscape that once existed billions of years ago. But even then there may have been Life, just not the kind of life we are accustomed to. At some point in time the ancient seas of of Cam......more