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MARC Record from Library of Congress

Record ID marc_loc_2016/BooksAll.2016.part38.utf8:145091668:2417
Source Library of Congress
Download Link /show-records/marc_loc_2016/BooksAll.2016.part38.utf8:145091668:2417?format=raw

LEADER: 02417cam a22003257a 4500
001 2010922420
003 DLC
005 20120414082602.0
008 100211s2010 enkab b 001 0 eng
010 $a 2010922420
015 $aGBB007828$2bnb
016 7 $a015469223$2Uk
020 $a9780199214280 (hbk.)
020 $a019921428X (hbk.)
035 $a(OCoLC)ocn501399852
040 $aUKM$cUKM$dBWKUK$dYDXCP$dBWK$dYAM$dCDX$dVP@$dBKX$dMIX$dZVM$dBDX$dDLC
042 $aukblcatcopy$alccopycat
050 00 $aQE501.4.P3$bS76 2010
082 04 $a551.46$222
100 1 $aStow, D. A. V.$q(Dorrik A. V.)
245 10 $aVanished ocean :$bhow Tethys reshaped the world /$cDorrik Stow.
260 $aOxford ;$aNew York :$bOxford University Press,$c2010.
300 $axii, 300 p. :$bill., maps ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 275-276) and index.
505 0 $aTethys the sea goddess -- Pangaea the supercontinent and the birth of Tethys -- Extinction, evolution and the great cycles of life -- Tethyan fecundity in the Jurassic seas -- Black death to black gold -- The greatest flood of all time : rise and fall of the seas -- End of an era : the debate continues -- Portrait of the Tethys seaway -- Closing ocean, rising mountain -- Death throes of an ocean -- Epilogue : perspective on the future.
520 $a"The Earth ever changes, and even vast oceans come and go. This is the story of such an ocean: how it grew to stretch in a wide belt across the Earth, the creatures that lived in it and at its shores, the changes it experienced, and how it shrank, broke up, and finally disappeared. Tethys, the geologists named it, after the sea goddess of Greek myth, daughter of Gaia and mother of great rivers. It began to form some 260 million years ago and vanished five and a half million years ago. How, then, do we know that it ever existed? Tethys has left us many clues: slivers of what used to be the sea floor, a whale graveyard, and oil--the oil of the Middle East on which so many rely today was formed from the decay of millions of tiny creatures that lived in its waters. Dorrik Stow, an oceanographer and geologist, tells how scientists have painstakingly pieced together these clues as he takes us through the life of Tethys." -- dust jacket flap.
650 0 $aTethys (Paleogeography)
650 0 $aOceanography.
650 0 $aMarine ecology.
650 0 $aPaleobiogeography.