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304 pages, Hardcover
First published June 25, 2024

We and other living creatures are more than inhabitants on earth; we are the earth, an outgrowth of its physical structure and an engine of its global cycles. Earth and its creatures are so intertwined that we can think of them as one. Beyond that, humans are the most extreme example of life transforming earth in recent history, in fact, the most extreme ever.Becoming Earth really seems to defy a summary G/R review. Because it is rather densely packed with descriptive information, it is easy to suffer "literary overload", as there is a deluge of terminology & scientific circumstance; that said, almost all of it is rather poetically stated. Here is an example of cumbersome scientific detail for the "lay reader"...
After cells with mitochondria arose, some of the assimilated cyanobacteria, which gradually became chloroplasts, the tiny green organelles that perform photosynthesis in the cells of plants & algae.*This does not appear to be a complete sentence, unless the word "which" is removed and an editor should have caught this. However, most of the prose in Ferris Jabr's book is quite lucid & much of it is highly poetic. Here are some further examples of the book's highly descriptive prose:
The planet (earth) is the largest known living system, the confluence of all other ecosystems, resembling smaller life forms. Life rhymes at every scale.There is also a profusion of geologic & biologic time-frames to consider but the findings of scientists are often interspersed with investigations by rather unlettered folks who just became fascinated by some facet of life & allowed their curiosity to propel them a great distance.
Our living earth is the miracle. Life is earth. We still carry the ocean in our blood. Earth is a stove that eats starlight & radiates song, whirling through the emptiness of space--pulsing, breathing evolving & just as capable of dying as we are.
Any individual plant, fungus or animal is in effect an ecosystem--with fur, bark skin teeming with trillions of microbes.
It is calculated that a gallon of gas represents 100 tons of ancient life, 20 mature elephants. A tank of gas is the equivalent of 300 elephants. Thus fossil fuel is an ecosystem in an urn.
Humans now emit between 60 & 120 times more CO2 than all volcanoes.


