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Good Reads  History & Other Humanities  Environmental History

The Little Ice Age How Climate Made History, 1300-1850

Popular Science
By: Brian M Fagan(Author)
258 pages, b/w illustrations, b/w maps
Publisher: Basic Books
The Little Ice Age
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  • The Little Ice Age ISBN: 9781541618596 Edition: 2 Paperback Dec 2019 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 5 days
    £14.99
    #246840
Price: £14.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

The groundbreaking history of how climate change transformed Europe and the world, from a renowned archaeologist – updated with a new preface on the latest climate research

The Little Ice Age tells the fascinating story of the turbulent, unpredictable, and often very cold years of modern European history. Using sources ranging from the dates of long-ago wine harvests and the business records of medieval monasteries to modern chemical analysis of ice cores, renowned archaeologist Brian Fagan reveals how a 500-year cold snap began in the fourteenth century. As Fagan shows, the increasingly cold and stormy weather dramatically altered fishing and farming practices, and it shaped familiar events, from Norse exploration to the settlement of North America, from the French Revolution to the Irish potato famine to the Industrial Revolution.

Now updated with a new preface discussing the latest historical climate research, The Little Ice Age offers deeply important context for understanding today's age of global warming. As the Little Ice Age shows, climate change does not come in gentle, easy stages, and its influence on human life is profound.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Professor of Archaeology at the University of California at Santa Barbara, Brian Fagan is the author of Floods, Famines, and Emperors, and The Great Journey and the editor of The Oxford Companion to Archaeology. He lives in Santa Barbara, California.

Popular Science
By: Brian M Fagan(Author)
258 pages, b/w illustrations, b/w maps
Publisher: Basic Books
Media reviews

"[The Little Ice Age] could do for the historical study of climate what Michel Foucault's classic Madness and Civilization did for the historical study of mental illness: make it a respectable subject for scholarly inquiry."
- Scientific American.

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