
Water
A Biography
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Narrado por:
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Giulio Boccaletti
Acerca de esta escucha
Spanning millennia and continents, here is a stunningly revealing history of how the distribution of water has shaped human civilization. Boccaletti, of The Nature Conservancy, “tackles the most important story of our time: our relationship with water in a world of looming scarcity” (Kelly McEvers, NPR host).
Writing with authority and brio, Giulio Boccaletti - honorary research associate at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford - shrewdly combines environmental and social history, beginning with the earliest civilizations of sedentary farmers on the banks of the Nile, the Tigris, and the Euphrates Rivers. Even as he describes how these societies were made possible by sea-level changes from the last glacial melt, he incisively examines how this type of farming led to irrigation and multiple cropping, which, in turn, led to a population explosion and labor specialization.
We see with clarity how irrigation’s structure informed social structure (inventions such as the calendar sprung from agricultural necessity); how in ancient Greece, the communal ownership of wells laid the groundwork for democracy; how the Greek and Roman experiences with water security resulted in systems of taxation; and how the modern world as we know it began with a legal framework for the development of water infrastructure.
Extraordinary for its monumental scope and piercing insightfulness, Water: A Biography richly enlarges our understanding of our relationship to - and fundamental reliance on - the most elemental substance on Earth.
Cover image: "Vista", painting by Tobias Tovera © 2016
©2020 Giulio Boccaletti (P)2020 Random House AudioLos oyentes también disfrutaron...
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Reseñas de la Crítica
"Brimming with ideas and unexpected correlations, Water is far more than a biography of its nominal subject.... The book stands as a compelling history of civilization itself." (Gerard Helferich, Wall Street Journal Book Review)
"This is one of the most ambitious books that I've read in a long time. It is both deep and broad." (Ari Shapiro, NPR All Things Considered)
"[A] wonderfully detailed account of humankind’s relationship with water.... During this time of accelerated population growth, climate change, and political instability, Water is essential reading." (George Kendall, Booklist)
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Historia
For centuries, people have been returning to the same tired nature-versus-nurture debate, trying to determine what we learn and what we inherit. In Dancing Cockatoos and the Dead Man Test, biologist Marlene Zuk goes beyond the binary and instead focuses on interaction, or the way that genes and environment work together. Driving her investigation is a simple but essential question: How does behavior evolve?
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Good information, but reader distracts from it.
- De Jeremy Proctor en 02-13-23
De: Marlene Zuk
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Allergic
- Our Irritated Bodies in a Changing World
- De: Theresa MacPhail
- Narrado por: Jaime Lamchick
- Duración: 11 h y 13 m
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Hay fever. Peanut allergies. Eczema. Either you have an allergy or you know someone who does. Billions of people worldwide—an estimated 30 to 40 percent of the global population—have some form of allergy. Even more concerning, over the last decade the number of people diagnosed with an allergy has been steadily increasing, placing an ever-growing medical burden on individuals, families, communities, and healthcare systems. Medical anthropologist Theresa MacPhail, herself an allergy sufferer whose father died of a bee sting, set out to understand why.
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Great insight. Very sincere!
- De SD en 10-02-23
De: Theresa MacPhail
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Every Living Thing
- The Great and Deadly Race to Know All Life
- De: Jason Roberts
- Narrado por: David de Vries
- Duración: 14 h y 2 m
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In the eighteenth century, two men—exact contemporaries and polar opposites—dedicated their lives to the same daunting task: identifying and describing all life on Earth. Carl Linnaeus, a pious Swedish doctor with a huckster’s flair, believed that life belonged in tidy, static categories. Georges-Louis de Buffon, an aristocratic polymath and keeper of France’s royal garden, viewed life as a dynamic swirl of complexities. Each began his task believing it to be difficult but not impossible: How could the planet possibly hold more than a few thousand species—or as many could fit on Noah’s Ark?
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Fascinating history of scientific thought
- De Candy Dan en 06-10-24
De: Jason Roberts
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Now
- The Physics of Time - and the Ephemeral Moment That Einstein Could Not Explain
- De: Richard A. Muller
- Narrado por: Christopher Grove
- Duración: 10 h y 3 m
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You are reading the word now right now. But what does that mean? What makes the ephemeral moment "now" so special? Its enigmatic character has bedeviled philosophers, priests, and modern-day physicists from Augustine to Einstein and beyond. Einstein showed that the flow of time is affected by both velocity and gravity, yet he despaired at his failure to explain the meaning of now. Equally puzzling: Why does time flow? Some physicists have given up trying to understand and call the flow of time an illusion.
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Physics mixed with spiritual claptrap!
- De Effe Oake en 04-03-17
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Consilience
- The Unity of Knowledge
- De: Edward O. Wilson
- Narrado por: Jonathan Hogan
- Duración: 17 h y 35 m
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In Consilience (a word that originally meant "jumping together"), Edward O. Wilson renews the Enlightenment's search for a unified theory of knowledge in disciplines that range from physics to biology, the social sciences and the humanities. Using the natural sciences as his model, Wilson forges dramatic links between fields. Presenting the latest findings in prose of wonderful clarity and oratorical eloquence, and synthesizing it into a dazzling whole, Consilience is science in the path-clearing traditions of Newton, Einstein, and Richard Feynman.
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A Singular Achievement!
- De The Saint en 02-25-19
De: Edward O. Wilson
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The Missing Thread
- A Women's History of the Ancient World
- De: Daisy Dunn
- Narrado por: Daisy Dunn, Jenny Funnell
- Duración: 17 h y 12 m
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Around four thousand years ago, the mysterious Minoans sculpted statues of topless women with snakes slithering on their arms. Over one thousand years later, Sappho wrote great poems of longing and desire. For classicist Daisy Dunn, these women—whether they were simply sitting at their looms at home or participating in the highest echelons of power—were up to something much more interesting than other histories would lead us to believe. Together, these women helped to make antiquity as we know it.
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Not quite what I expected
- De havanese lover en 01-13-25
De: Daisy Dunn
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Into the Storm
- Two Ships, a Deadly Hurricane, and an Epic Battle for Survival
- De: Tristram Korten
- Narrado por: Dan Woren
- Duración: 9 h y 48 m
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In late September 2015, Hurricane Joaquin swept past the Bahamas and swallowed a pair of cargo vessels in its destructive path: El Faro, a 790-foot American behemoth with a crew of 33, and the Minouche, a 230-foot freighter with a dozen sailors aboard. From the parallel stories of these ships and their final journeys, Tristram Korten weaves a remarkable tale of two veteran sea captains from very different worlds, the harrowing ordeals of their desperate crews, and the Coast Guard’s extraordinary battle against a storm that defied prediction.
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Just average
- De Rickmeister en 03-13-20
De: Tristram Korten
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The Order
- De: Kevin Flynn
- Narrado por: Gibson Frazier
- Duración: 20 h y 25 m
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Two courageous investigative journalists deliver an insider’s account of the “silent brotherhood”—the most dangerous radical-right hate group to surface since the Ku Klux Klan. They claim to be patriots, as American as apple pie, but they are this nation’s deadly brotherhood—hate groups that package their alienation against the federal government under such names as the Aryan Nation, the Order, and other white supremacist militias.
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Not very interesting
- De Anonymous User en 03-05-25
De: Kevin Flynn
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The Buried
- An Archaeology of the Egyptian Revolution
- De: Peter Hessler
- Narrado por: Peter Hessler
- Duración: 16 h y 44 m
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Drawn by a fascination with Egypt's rich history and culture, Peter Hessler moved with his wife and twin daughters to Cairo in 2011. He wanted to learn Arabic, explore Cairo's neighborhoods, and visit the legendary archaeological digs of Upper Egypt. After his years of covering China for The New Yorker, friends warned him Egypt would be a much quieter place. But not long before he arrived, the Egyptian Arab Spring had begun, and now the country was in chaos.
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A Fascinating, Funny, and Moving Account of Egypt
- De Jefferson en 07-23-19
De: Peter Hessler
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Papyrus
- The Invention of Books in the Ancient World
- De: Irene Vallejo, Charlotte Whittle - translator
- Narrado por: Sophie Roberts
- Duración: 17 h y 30 m
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Long before books were mass-produced, hand-copied scrolls made from Nile River reeds were the treasures of the ancient world. Emperors and pharaohs, determined to possess them, dispatched emissaries to the edges of the known world to bring them back. Exploring the deep and fascinating history of the written word, from the oral tradition to scrolls to codices, internationally bestselling author Irene Vallejo shows that books have always been a precious and precarious vehicle for civilization.
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Great read
- De Hunter Pechin en 12-15-22
De: Irene Vallejo, y otros
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Our Tribal Future
- How to Channel Our Foundational Human Instincts into a Force for Good
- De: David R. Samson
- Narrado por: Fajer Al-Kaisi
- Duración: 14 h y 52 m
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Tribalism is one of the most complex and ancient evolutionary forces; it gave us the capacity for cooperation and competition, and allowed us to navigate increasingly complex social landscapes. It is so powerful that it can predict our behavior even better than race, class, gender, or religion. But in our vast modern world, has this blessing become a curse? Our Tribal Future explores a central paradox of our species: how altruism, community, kindness, and genocide are all driven by the same core adaptation.
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Best Game Plan Yet for Unfucking the World
- De Rob R. en 07-26-23
De: David R. Samson
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The Deep History of Ourselves
- The Four-Billion-Year Story of How We Got Conscious Brains
- De: Joseph LeDoux
- Narrado por: Fred Sanders
- Duración: 11 h y 9 m
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Renowned neuroscientist Joseph LeDoux digs into the natural history of life on earth to provide a new perspective on the similarities between us and our ancestors in deep time. This pause-resisting survey of the whole of terrestrial evolution sheds new light on how nervous systems evolved in animals, how the brain developed, and what it means to be human. In The Deep History of Ourselves, LeDoux argues that the key to understanding human behavior lies in viewing evolution through the prism of the first living organisms.
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Oversold
- De Michael en 03-04-20
De: Joseph LeDoux
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Life on Other Planets
- A Memoir of Finding My Place in the Universe
- De: Aomawa Shields PhD
- Narrado por: Aomawa Shields PhD
- Duración: 10 h y 41 m
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As a kid, Aomawa Shields was always bumping into things, her neck craned up at the sky, dreaming of becoming an astronaut. A year into an astrophysics PhD program, plagued by self-doubt and discouraged by a white male professor who suggested that she—a young Black woman who also loved fashion, makeup, and the arts—didn’t belong, she left astronomy and pursued acting professionally for a decade, before a day job working for NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope drew her back to the stars.
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I’m in love with this book!
- De Evelyn en 07-21-23
Tour de Force
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Well-researched and we’ll told water history book
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I only wish the reader was different
I am very hard of hearing and the accent was different from that of other readers.
That made it sometimes hard for me to understand
That said, I would get it again
Great book, but reader could be better
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The many mistakes in managing water resources revealed here are invisible as we look from our high level of assisted living.
As Humans expanded the assisted living built-environment in unsustainable ways, Nature was scarred. Water resources were damaged, and people suffered and died due to failures of intelligence.
The current sustainability challenge we face is a consequence of the 30 trillion metric tonne Technosphere.
Places in the natural environment where expansion could not be maintained, ancient settlements, are found by lidar today. Water engineering and governance are little-studied but critical, as we learn from Giulio in this book.
Listen, think, integrate and pass on this important perspective.
Understand Built-Environment Governance~Know Water
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Very interesting, but academic read...
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As we face the challenges of global climate change, we need to understand the history of water management in order to create and manage the infrastructure that will sustain is into this uncertain future. Learning from the mistakes of the past as well as the victories will help us envision tomorrow's water management landscape.
Like Cadillac Desert, but for the whole world
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Fascinating book.
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Solid water
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History, Water, History of Water, Water shaping History
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nothing more than a high school term paper
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