• Twitter
  • Facebook
Theme
Currency
Log-in | Register | My Basket : arrow
Item   Qty Price
Mammalian Teeth - Form and Function Mammalian Teeth - Form and Function
Type : Hardback
Author : Martin, T.; von Koenigswald, W. (Eds)
1 £82.00

What Do Bees Think About? What Do Bees Think About?
Type : Paperback
Author : Lihoreau, M.; Duncan, A. (Trans.)
1 £18.00

Victorian Mountaineers Victorian Mountaineers
Type : Hardback
Author : Clark, R.
1 £15.00

British & Irish Butterfly Rarities: Migrants, Extinctions & Introductions British & Irish Butterfly Rarities: Migrants, Extinctions & Introductions
Type : Hardback
Author : Eeles, P.
1 £27.50

Goods Total £142.50

View Your Basket Checkout My Order
4 items - £142.50
Our Publications

The Pemberley Bookshop

Our Shop

Why not come and peruse our comprehensive range of natural history titles at our well stocked bookshop, where you can also receive our expert advice. Click here for details of our shop.

Reefs of Time: What Fossils Reveal about Coral Survival

by Gardiner, L.S.

ForthcomingSpecial Offer
  • Hardback £18.75
  • £25.00 (Save £6.25)
  • New Book Availability : Not yet published
  • Add to wishlist
  • Catalogue No : 61978
  • ISBN : 9780691247335
  • Published : AUG 2025
  • Cover : Hardback
  • Pages : 288

Our customers have not yet submitted a review for this title - click here to be the first to write a review

Description:

How fossilised reefs hold clues to the survival of corals in the Anthropocene.

With rising global temperatures, pollution, overfishing, ocean acidification, and other problems caused by humans, there’s no question that today’s coral reefs are in trouble. As predictions about the future of these ecosystems grow increasingly dire, scientists are looking in an unlikely place for new ways to save corals: the past. The reefs of yesteryear faced challenges too, from changing sea level to temperature shifts, and understanding how they survived and when they faltered can help guide our efforts to help ensure a future for reefs.

Lisa Gardiner weaves together the latest cutting-edge science with stories of her expeditions to tropical locales to show how fossils and other reef remains offer tantalizing glimpses of how corals persisted through time and how this knowledge can guide our efforts to ensure a future for these remarkable organisms. Gardiner takes readers on an excursion into ‘the shallow end of deep time' - when marine life was much like today’s yet unaffected by human influence - to explore the cities of fossilised limestone left behind by corals and other reef life millennia ago. The changes in reefs today are unlike anything ever seen before, but the fossil record offers hope that the coral reefs of tomorrow can weather the environmental challenges that lie ahead.

A breathtaking journey of scientific discovery, this book reveals how lessons from the past can help us chart a path forward for coral reefs struggling for survival in an age of climate crisis and mass extinction.

You may also like...

Ponds, Pools and Puddles (New Naturalist 148)

Ponds, Pools and Puddles (New Naturalist 148)

Biggs, J.; Williams, P.

Price £46.50

(Save £18.50)

Studies on the Humic Acid Lake Gribso

Studies on the Humic Acid Lake Gribso

Berg, K.; Petersen, I.C. et al

Price £40.00

The Micropalaeontology of Oceans:  Proceedings of the symposium held in Cambridge from 10 to 17 September 1967 under the title

The Micropalaeontology of Oceans: Proceedings of the symposium held in

Funnell, B.M.; Riedel, W.R. (Eds)

Price £30.00

Biological Studies on the River Susaa

Biological Studies on the River Susaa

Berg, K. et al

Price £30.00

Subscribe to our mailing list More details about our mailing list arrow