TY - BOOK ID - 77874573 TI - The energy of nature PY - 2001 SN - 1281966207 9786611966201 0226668053 9780226668055 0226668061 9780226668062 9781281966209 661196620X PB - Chicago University of Chicago Press DB - UniCat KW - Force and energy. KW - Physics. KW - Natural philosophy KW - Philosophy, Natural KW - Physical sciences KW - Dynamics KW - Conservation of energy KW - Correlation of forces KW - Energy KW - Physics KW - Power resources. KW - natural world, outdoors, academic, scholarly, research, science, scientific, interdisciplinary, disciplines, earth, sciences, naturalist, physics, chemistry, biology, erosion, mountains, chemical, bonds, nuclear, earthquake, volcano, sun, solar, electromagnetic, waves, illustrated, illustrations, college, university, higher ed, energetics, ocean, atmosphere, wind, sea, seismic. KW - Force UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:77874573 AB - Energy is crucial for events of every kind, in this world or any other. Without energy, nothing would ever happen. Nothing would move and there would be no life. The sun wouldn't shine, winds wouldn't blow, rivers wouldn't flow, trees wouldn't grow, birds wouldn't fly, and fish wouldn't swim; indeed no material object, living or dead, could even exist. In spite of all this, energy is seldom considered a part of what we call "nature." In The Energy of Nature, E. C. Pielou explores energy's role in nature-how and where it originates, what it does, and what becomes of it. Drawing on a wide range of scientific disciplines, from physics, chemistry, and biology to all the earth sciences, as well as on her own lifelong experience as a naturalist, Pielou opens our eyes to the myriad ways energy and its transfer affect the earth and its inhabitants. Along the way we learn how energy is delivered to the earth from the sun; how it causes weather, winds, and tides; how it shapes the earth through mountain building and erosion; how it is captured and used by living things; how it is stored in chemical bonds; how nuclear energy is released; how it heats the unseen depths of the planet and is explosively revealed in the turmoil of earthquakes and volcanoes; how energy manifests itself in magnetism and electromagnetic waves; how we harness it to fuel human societies; and much more. Filled with fascinating information and helpful illustrations (hand drawn by the author), The Energy of Nature is fun, readable, and instructive. Science buffs of all ages will be delighted. "A luminous, inquiring, and thoughtful exploration of Earth's energetics."-Jocylyn McDowell, Discovery ER -