Global warming : the complete briefing John Houghton
Tipo de material:
Libro
impreso(a)
Idioma: Inglés Analíticas: Mostrar analíticasDetalles de publicación: Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 2009Edición: Fourth editionDescripción: xviii, 438 páginas fotografías, ilustraciones 25 centímetrosISBN: - 0521709164
- 9780521709163
- 551.523 H6
| Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura topográfica | Estado | Código de barras | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Libros | Biblioteca Chetumal Acervo General (AG) | Acervo General | 551.523 H6 | Disponible | ECO030007475 | |
| Libros | Biblioteca Tapachula Acervo General (AG) | Acervo General | 551.523 H6 | Disponible | ECO020011548 |
Incluye bibliografía e índice: páginas 426-438
Glosario: páginas 418-425
Preface.. Global warming and climate change.. The greenhouse effect.. The greenhouse gases.. Climates of the past.. Modelling the climate.. Climate change in the twenty-first century and beyond.. The impacts of climate change.. Why should we be concerned?.. Weighing the uncertainty.. A strategy for action to slow and stabilise climate change.. Energy and transport for the future.. The global village.. Appendix 1.. Appendix 2.. Glossary.. Index
John Houghton's market-leading textbook is now in full colour and includes the latest IPCC findings, making it the definitive guide to climate change. Written for students across a wide range of disciplines, its simple, logical flow of ideas gives an invaluable grounding in the science and impacts of climate change and highlights the need for action on global warming. Is there evidence for climate changing due to human activities? How do we account for recent extremes of weather and climate? Can global electricity provision and transport ever be carbon free? Written by a leading figure at the forefront of action to confront humanity€s most serious environmental problem, this undergraduate textbook comprehensively explores these and other issues, allowing students to think through the problem, assess the data and draw conclusions on the action that should be taken, by governments, by industry and by each and every one of us. Written by a leading figure at the forefront of action to confront humanity's most serious environmental problem, it is fully updated with new findings from the Nobel Prize-winning IPCC 2007 report. It outlines action that could be taken by governments, by industry and by individuals, to get students thinking about possible solutions Inglés