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Big history : from the Big Bang to the present /

by Brown, Cynthia Stokes.
Type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York New Press Distributed by W.W. Norton, c2007Description: xvi, 288 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cm.ISBN: 1595581960.Subject(s): Human ecology | World historyOnline resources: Table of contents only
Contents:
The depths of time and space. Expanding into universe (13.7 billion-4.6 billion years ago) -- Living earth (4.6 billion-5 million years ago) -- Human emergence: one species (5 million-35,000 years ago) -- Advanced hunting and gathering (35,000-10,000 years ago) -- Ten thousand warm years. Early agriculture (8000-3500 BCE) -- Early cities (3500-800 BCE) -- The Afro-Eurasian network (800 BCE-200 CE) -- Expanding the Afro-Eurasian network (200-1000 CE) -- Emergence of American civilizations (200-1450 CE) -- One Afro-Eurasia (1000-1500 CE) -- Connecting the globe (1450-1800 CE) -- Industrialization (1750-2000 CE) -- What now? What next?
Summary: An epic for our time, Big History begins when the universe is no more than a single point the size of an atom, squeezed together in unimaginable density, and ends with a twenty-first-century planet inhabited by 6.1 billion people. It's a story that takes in prehistoric geology, human evolution, the agrarian age, the Black Death, the voyages of Columbus, the industrial revolution, and global warming. Historian Cynthia Brown visits the Vikings, the Mayas and Aztecs, the Incas, the Mongol empire, and the Islamic heartlands. Along the way she considers topics as varied as cell formation, population growth, global disparities, and illiteracy, creating a stunning synthesis of historical and scientific knowledge of humanity and the earth we inhabit. Big History represents a new kind of history, one that skillfully interweaves historical knowledge and cutting-edge science. In an age of global warming, when the fate of the earth hangs in the balance, scientific advances permit us to see the universe as never before, grasping the timescales that allow us to understand the history of mankind in the context of its ecological impact on the planet. Cynthia Brown's lucid, accessible narrative is the first popularization of this innovative new field of study, as thrilling as it is ambitious. - Publisher.
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Item type Location Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
SS Nonfiction SS Nonfiction
Secondary
Book 909 B (Browse shelf) 1 Available H032285555
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references (p. [265]-274) and index.

The depths of time and space. Expanding into universe (13.7 billion-4.6 billion years ago) --
Living earth (4.6 billion-5 million years ago) --
Human emergence: one species (5 million-35,000 years ago) --
Advanced hunting and gathering (35,000-10,000 years ago) --
Ten thousand warm years. Early agriculture (8000-3500 BCE) --
Early cities (3500-800 BCE) --
The Afro-Eurasian network (800 BCE-200 CE) --
Expanding the Afro-Eurasian network (200-1000 CE) --
Emergence of American civilizations (200-1450 CE) --
One Afro-Eurasia (1000-1500 CE) --
Connecting the globe (1450-1800 CE) --
Industrialization (1750-2000 CE) --
What now? What next?

Publisher's Weekly, July 2007

Kirkus Review, August 2007

Reference and Research Book News, November 2007

An epic for our time, Big History begins when the universe is no more than a single point the size of an atom, squeezed together in unimaginable density, and ends with a twenty-first-century planet inhabited by 6.1 billion people. It's a story that takes in prehistoric geology, human evolution, the agrarian age, the Black Death, the voyages of Columbus, the industrial revolution, and global warming. Historian Cynthia Brown visits the Vikings, the Mayas and Aztecs, the Incas, the Mongol empire, and the Islamic heartlands. Along the way she considers topics as varied as cell formation, population growth, global disparities, and illiteracy, creating a stunning synthesis of historical and scientific knowledge of humanity and the earth we inhabit. Big History represents a new kind of history, one that skillfully interweaves historical knowledge and cutting-edge science. In an age of global warming, when the fate of the earth hangs in the balance, scientific advances permit us to see the universe as never before, grasping the timescales that allow us to understand the history of mankind in the context of its ecological impact on the planet. Cynthia Brown's lucid, accessible narrative is the first popularization of this innovative new field of study, as thrilling as it is ambitious. - Publisher.

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