Synopses & Reviews
This text focuses on helping non-science majors develop an understanding of how geology and humanity interact. Ed Keller—the author who first defined the environmental geology curriculum—focuses on five fundamental concepts of environmental geology: Human Population Growth, Sustainability, Earth as a System, Hazardous Earth Processes, and Scientific Knowledge and Values. These concepts are introduced at the outset of the text, integrated throughout the text, and revisited at the end of each chapter. The Fifth Edition emphasizes currency, which is essential to this dynamic subject, and strengthens Keller’s hallmark “Fundamental Concepts of Environmental Geology,” unifying the text’s diverse topics while applying the concepts to real-world examples.
Synopsis
This book focuses on helping non-science readers develop an understanding of how geology and humanity interact. The
Fifth Edition emphasizes currency, which is essential to this dynamic subject, and strengthens Keller's hallmark "Fundamental Concepts of Environmental Geology," unifying the text's diverse topics while applying the concepts to real-world examples.
KEY TOPICS: Philosophy and Fundamental Concepts; Internal Structure of Earth and Plate Tectonics; Minerals and Rocks; Ecology and Geology; Introduction to Natural Hazards; Earthquakes and Related Phenomena; Tsunami; Volcanic Activity; Rivers and Flooding; Slope Processes, Landslides, and Subsidence; Coastal Processes; Impact of Extraterrestrial Objects; Water Resources; Water Pollution; Mineral Resources; Energy Resources; Soils and Environment; Waste as a Resource: Waste Management; Air Pollution; Global Climate Change; Geology, Society, and the Future.
MARKET: An engagin reference for readers interested in environmental geology.
About the Author
Edward A. Keller is a professor, researcher, writer, and most importantly, mentor and teacher to undergraduate and graduate students. Currently, Dr. Keller's students are working on earthquake hazards, how waves of sediment move through a river system following disturbance, and geologic controld on habitat to endangered southern steelhead trout. He was born and raised in California (Bachelor’s degree in Geology and Mathematics from California State University at Fresno, Master’s degree in Geology from University of California at Davis), it was while pursuing his Ph.D. in Geology from Purdue University in 1973 that Ed wrote the first edition of Environmental Geology, the text that became the foundation of the environmental geology curriculum. Ed joined the faculty of the University of California Santa Barbara in 1976 and has been there since, serving multiple times as the chair of both the Environmental Studies and Hydrologic Science programs. In that time he has been the author on over 100 articles, including seminal works on fluvial processes and tectonic geomorphology. Ed’s academic honors include the Don J. Easterbrook Distinguished Scientist Award, Geological Society of America (2004), Quatercentenary Fellowship from Cambridge University, England (2000), two Outstanding Alumnus Awards from Purdue University (1994, 1996), A Distinguished Alumnus Award from California State University at Fresno (1998), the Outstanding Outreach Award from Southern California Earthquake Center (1999).
Table of Contents
PART ONE Foundations of Environmental Geology Chapter 1 Philosophy and Fundamental Concepts
Chapter 2 Internal Structure of Earth and Plate Tectonics
Chapter 3 Minerals and Rocks
Chapter 4 Ecology and Geology
PART TWO Earth Processes and Natural Hazards
Chapter 5 Introduction to Natural Hazards
Chapter 6 Earthquakes and Related Phenomena
Chapter 7 Tsunami (new chapter)
Chapter 8 Volcanic Activity
Chapter 9 Rivers and Flooding
Chapter 10 Slope Processes, Landslides, and Subsidence
Chapter 11 Coastal Processes
Chapter 12 Impact of Extraterrestrial Objects
PART THREE Resources and Pollution
Chapter 13 Water Resources
Chapter 14 Water Pollution
Chapter 15 Mineral Resources
Chapter 16 Energy Resources
Chapter 17 Soils and Environment
PART FOUR Environmental Management, Global Perspective, and Society
Chapter 18 Global Climate Change
Chapter 19 Geology, Society, and the Future