Less Heat, More Light, John D. Aber
Less Heat, More Light, John D. Aber
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Less Heat, More Light
A Guided Tour of Weather, Climate, and Climate Change

Author: John D. Aber

Narrator: David Stifel

Unabridged: 7 hr 46 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 08/29/2023


Synopsis

A straightforward and fact-based exploration of how weather happens, how it relates to climate, and how science answers major questions about Earth as a system

Climate change is one of the most hotly contested environmental topics of our day. To answer criticisms and synthesize available information, scientists have been driven to devise increasingly complex models of the climate system. This book conveys that the basics of climate and climate change have been known for decades, and that relatively simple descriptions can capture the major features of the climate system and help the general public understand what controls climate and weather, and how both might be changing.

Renowned environmental scientist and educator John D. Aber distills what he has learned from a long fascination with weather and climate, the process of science, and the telling of the story of science. This is not a book about policies and politics. Instead, it explores how weather happens, how it relates to climate, and how science has been used to answer major questions about the Earth as a system and inform policies that have reversed environmental degradation. By providing a guided tour of the science of weather, this thoughtful survey will contribute clarity and rationality to the public understanding of climate change.

About John D. Aber

John D. Aber is university professor emeritus of environmental sciences at the University of New Hampshire, where he also served as vice president for research and as provost. He lives in Durham, New Hampshire.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Andrew on August 31, 2024

This book does a phenomenal job at laying out the science of climate change, but also *why* and *how* the climate changes. Data and sources used are freely accessible and the author readily asks the reader to go ahead to look at the data themselves. The book is structured in a way that reaches both......more

Goodreads review by Paul on February 14, 2024

This is a good compliment to The Climate Book Anthology I recently read. In order to truly appreciate the high quality of this read, it helps to understand what the major Climate Change issues are. This assumes such knowledge and jumps into the scientific details. His title for the book is very clev......more