Oxygen Audiobook By Nick Lane cover art

Oxygen

The Molecule That Made the World

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Oxygen

By: Nick Lane
Narrated by: Nigel Patterson
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About this listen

Three hundred million years ago, in Carboniferous times, dragonflies grew as big as seagulls, with wingspans of nearly a meter. Researchers claim they could have flown only if the air had contained more oxygen than today - probably as much as 35 percent. Giant spiders, tree ferns, marine rock formations, and fossil charcoals all tell the same story. High oxygen levels may also explain the global firestorm that contributed to the demise of the dinosaurs after the asteroid impact.

The strange and profound effects that oxygen has had on the evolution of life pose a riddle that this audiobook sets out to answer. Oxygen is a toxic gas. Divers breathing pure oxygen at depth suffer from convulsions and lung injury. Fruit flies raised at twice the normal atmospheric levels of oxygen live half as long as their siblings. Reactive forms of oxygen, known as free radicals, are thought to cause aging in people. Yet if atmospheric oxygen reached 35 percent in the Carboniferous, why did it promote exuberant growth instead of rapid aging and death?

Oxygen takes the listener on an enthralling journey, as gripping as a thriller, as it unravels the unexpected ways in which oxygen spurred the evolution of life and death.

©2002 Nick Lane (P)2020 Tantor
Biological Sciences Earth Sciences Paleontology Popular Science
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What listeners say about Oxygen

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went deeper into the concept of oxygen

the voice actor is outstanding and helps make a difficult subject easier to listen to.

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Super interesting but often dry

love the parts on the earth and evolution of life. The discussions of human disease often felt too tangential and some of the details got hard to follow in audio. On net, learned a bunch and enjoyed the book.

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1 person found this helpful

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Great read!

Nick Lane is one of my favourite authors. His story telling and writing style makes complex scientific concepts come to life, and easy to understand.

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A great book

A wonderful book that I found to be developmental and maturative for a young man coming of age such as myself. I found this book to be highly relatable and I generally found it intelligent. I further highly recommend this book.

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A Story About Pretty Much Everything

Super interesting book that covers the formation of the earth, the beginning of life on our planet, evolution, genetics, health, lifestyle, diet, etc. Lot's of new information to me like:

1. LUCA, the last universal common ancestor or last universal cellular ancestor (LUCA), is the most recent population of organisms from which all organisms now living on Earth have a common descent, the most recent common ancestor of all current life on Earth.

2. The Great Oxidation Even or Catastrophe might not have been a catastrophe at all. Meaning, a surplus of oxygen in the atmosphere after the invention of photosynthesis might not have caused a mass extinction as has been widely speculated.

3. Photosynthesis evolved only once.

4. Were it not for the invention of photosynthesis, which created a surplus of oxygen in the atmosphere, which in turn helped to create an ozone layer, Earth would have lost it's liquid oceans to evaporation as happened to the liquid oceans on Mars and Venus. This also points to the fact that if life ever existed on Mars and Venus, it certainly never evolved the ability to photosynthesis.

5. Mitochondria, by taking up residence, or more likely, seeking refuge inside a the cell membrane, might have found a way to perpetuate the conditions of a low-oxygen environment from which it originally evolved as a bacteria billions of years ago! Whoa!

Finally, I listed to the audio book which was read by Nigel Patterson. Patterson might be my favorite narrator. I could listen to him read just about anything.

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The Very Best of The Best

This was the third and my favorite of books written by Nick Lane, my new favorite biochemist/author . This book with the “simple” title of Oxygen weaves together General chemistry, biochemistry, geochemistry, organic chemistry, plate tectonics , nutrition, life origin research...... the list is endless . Yet these seemingly minimally related topics are deftly woven together to cover most things I imagined might be covered in a book named after the element, and many more I never considered . A thoroughly enjoyable was to spend an entire day.
I’m sure to go back through it time and again!

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A real tour de force!

I am a recently retired medical research scientist. I learned more from this audiobook than all my many tears of reading and publishing. It will be challenging for non-scientists, but is sprinkled with helpful metaphors. It is repetitive, as it must be to let the reader see the forest, beyond the many hundreds of trees which are examined.

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Loved it

Such an outstanding review of a complex subject without dumbing it down. I think I shall listen to it multiple times.

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4 people found this helpful

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The science of where oxygen came from & adaption.


very comprehensive, full of science that had passed me bye since graduating College. A lot to still learn, it will be a better read during the next read.

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Exceeded my expectations; highly recommended

Very interesting how the author ties in so many seemingly unrelated topics but makes them an interesting part of the story. He was great at explaining the relationships at a level that made it interesting and understandable but w/o requiring a Masters degree in the subject matter or making it boring. I appreciated how he compared and evaluated various explanations and how he and others arrived at their conclusions.

Highly recommended for anyone interested in Earth's past, the relationship between various environmental conditions and the factors that affect them. or the cause and effect relationship between our environment and ourselves.

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