Ice rivers : a story of glaciers, wilderness, and humanity / Jemma Wadham.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780691229010
- ISBN: 0691229015
- ISBN: 9780691231785
- ISBN: 0691231788
- Physical Description: 1 online resource (xv, 219 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates) : color illustrations, map.
- Publisher: UK : Allen Lane, an imprint of Penguin Books, 2021.
- Copyright: ©2021
Content descriptions
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references. |
Formatted Contents Note: | Introduction: Icy Beginnings -- Part One. The Smell of the Ice -- 1. Glimpses of an Underworld: The Swiss Alps -- 2. Bears, Bears Everywhere: Svalbard -- Part Two. The Great Ice Sheets -- 3. Plumbing the Depths: Greenland -- 4. Life at the Extremes: Antarctica -- Color Plates -- Part Three. In the Shadow of Glaciers -- 5. Beware of the GLOF!: Patagonia -- 6. White Rivers Running Dry: The Indian Himalaya -- 7. The Last Ice: The Cordillera Blanca -- Afterword: A Fork in the Path |
Source of Description Note: | Description based on print version record. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Electronic books. Popular works. |
Electronic resources
- Choice Reviews : Choice Reviews 2022 April
This compelling autobiographical text by Wadham (glaciology, Univ. of Bristol) takes a uniquely personal approach to introducing readers to glaciers, glacier loss, and the importance of these "ice rivers" to the world. The narrative follows her as she travels to remote places in Europe and to Antarctica documenting the ecological roles that glaciers play in sustaining imperiled natural habitats as well as the world's agriculture and fishing industries. Wadham presents a thoughtful and intimate exploration of the important relationship glaciers have with the planet and, by extension, with humanity as people confront the damaging realities of global climate change. The book is an easy read, demonstrating Wadham's commitment to making her topic accessible for nonscientists. She accomplishes this through masterful employment of a reflective personal writing style, focusing on interactions with the people she meets during her travels, and by describing her research in a remarkably relatable way. She concludes with a helpful glossary and a selection of photographic illustrations for reference. A broad audience will welcome this book, but those interested in glaciers and climate change will receive it most enthusiastically. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.
--W. Weston, San Diego State University
Wil Weston
San Diego State University
Wil Weston Choice Reviews 59:08 April 2022 Copyright 2022 American Library Association. - ForeWord Magazine Reviews : ForeWord Magazine Reviews 2021 - September/October
Glaciologist Jemma Wadham's anguish over her field of study being besieged by climate change underpins Ice Rivers, which introduces seven diverse glaciers. It's an emotional, masterful science narrative that's coupled with scenes from Wadham's personal and professional life.
Wadham's glaciers are dazzling and distinctive. They have snouts and complex geographies; they creep and slide; they are studded with plant and microbial life that nourishes poles and mountain ranges. Some lie atop huge ancient lakes and methane reservoirs; others are riddled with icy shafts funneling meltwater into rushing underground rivers. Most of all, they are important climate regulators that lock up much of the planet's freshwater storesââand they are melting at alarming rates.
The book relates the adventures, dangers, and joys of field work at inhospitable wilderness sites. Sleeplessness, monotonous rations, and relentless cold and wind are offset by the "communal mirth" of meals, music, and shared excitement over fresh discoveries and successful experiments. Wadham's sensual writing about the exquisite beauty of pristine landscapes, intense wildness, and the satisfaction of mastering difficult skills and equipment is punctuated by bits of self-deprecating humor.
There are insights into the challenges of being an expedition leader and a rare women in a "rufty-tufty macho field," too. Wadham's exploits rappelling down moulins, chain-sawing ice, and pushing through with a broken kneecap and an undiagnosed brain tumor (not at the same time) display her toughness and dedication, but are balanced by revelations of personal loss and fears about the aftermath of unprecedented, rapid changes in the environment.
Edifying and expressive, Ice Rivers documents how glaciers are integral to their icy ecosystems, to vulnerable human and wildlife populations, and to Earth as a whole. Wadham is an artful storyteller who makes a passionate case for taking bold, swift action on climate issues.
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