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Falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them

Did an enormous collision in the Asteroid Belt, orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter, bombard Earth with meteorites 470 million years ago? Astonishing new research suggests it did, and a revolutionary theory is emerging that this bombardment resulted in the single greatest increase in biologica...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nield, Ted, Books, Granta
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Lyons Press 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2639340
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author Nield, Ted
Books, Granta
author_facet Nield, Ted
Books, Granta
author_sort Nield, Ted
collection CERN
description Did an enormous collision in the Asteroid Belt, orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter, bombard Earth with meteorites 470 million years ago? Astonishing new research suggests it did, and a revolutionary theory is emerging that this bombardment resulted in the single greatest increase in biological diversity on the planet since the origin of life. Introducing these discoveries to the general public for the first time, Ted Nield challenges the view that meteorites are bad news. Tracing the history of meteorites from the first recorded strike to the videos made routinely today, he reveals the fascinating ways in which meteorites have transformed from omens of doom to a stepping stone to Mars in twenty-first-century space exploration. The Falling Sky will shatter everything you thought you knew about one of the most terrifying forces in the universe.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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publishDate 2011
publisher Lyons Press
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spelling cern-26393402021-04-21T18:42:34Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2639340engNield, TedBooks, GrantaFalling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love themAstrophysics and AstronomyDid an enormous collision in the Asteroid Belt, orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter, bombard Earth with meteorites 470 million years ago? Astonishing new research suggests it did, and a revolutionary theory is emerging that this bombardment resulted in the single greatest increase in biological diversity on the planet since the origin of life. Introducing these discoveries to the general public for the first time, Ted Nield challenges the view that meteorites are bad news. Tracing the history of meteorites from the first recorded strike to the videos made routinely today, he reveals the fascinating ways in which meteorites have transformed from omens of doom to a stepping stone to Mars in twenty-first-century space exploration. The Falling Sky will shatter everything you thought you knew about one of the most terrifying forces in the universe.Lyons Pressoai:cds.cern.ch:26393402011
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Nield, Ted
Books, Granta
Falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them
title Falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them
title_full Falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them
title_fullStr Falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them
title_full_unstemmed Falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them
title_short Falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them
title_sort falling sky: the science and history of meteorites and why we should learn to love them
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2639340
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