During the past few years, geologists James Lawrence Powell has been involved with some rather dubious activities related to impact cratering research, namely the Younger Dryas nonsense and its various incarnations. However, this should not scare away the potential readers of at least the two great books of his that I’ve read. Night Comes to the Cretaceous was an excellent account of the K/T exctinction and the scientific debate about it. A couple of chapters from that are actually reused in his later book, Four Revolutions in the Earth Sciences – From Heresy to Truth.
The revolutions are the discovery of the age of the Earth, continental drift, asteroid impacts and global warming. Powell provides clear, thorough and highly readable summaries about the development of these ideas that the scientific establishment considered heretical for a long time. He knows the topics, so factual mistakes are largely absent.
The part about impacts deals also with the origin of Moon (about which he’s also written a book, which I probably should read), so lunar enthusiasts also benefit from reading Powell’s excellent book. At the end of the impact part he does discuss the Younger Dryas stuff, so he was already clearly intrigued, but in this book his tone is still pretty neutral.
In my experience, Powell is one of the best writers of the history of Earth sciences. Thus, both Night Comes to the Cretacous (which I read before joining Goodreads, hence no proper review) and Four Revolutions in the Earth Sciences are highly recommended to anyone with an interest in geology and/or the history of science.
4.5/5