Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Book Cover
book
BookBook
Author Bogard, Paul, 1966- author.

Title The ground beneath us : from the oldest cities to the last wilderness, what dirt tells us about who we are / Paul Bogard.

Publication Info. New York : Little, Brown and Company, 2017.
©2017

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Glastonbury, Welles-Turner Memorial Library - Adult Department  631.4 BOGARD    Check Shelf
 Manchester, Main Library - Non Fiction  631.4 BOGARD    Check Shelf
 Mansfield, Main Library - Adult Nonfiction  631.4 BOGARD    Check Shelf
 New Britain, Main Library - Non Fiction  631.4 BOG    Check Shelf
 Newington, Lucy Robbins Welles Library - Adult Department  631.4 BOGARD    Check Shelf
Edition First edition.
Description ix, 307 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color), map ; 25 cm
Note "March 2017"--Title page verso.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 265-297) and index.
Contents Paved and hallowed. Manhattan ; Mexico City ; London ; Northern Virginia ; Gettysburg -- Farmed and wild. Bishopstone ; Soil ; Ames ; Grass ; The sandhills -- Hell and sacred. Appalachia ; Treblinka ; Alaska ; The Sierra Nevada ; Home.
Summary "When a teaspoon of soil contains millions of species, and when we pave over the earth on a daily basis, what does that mean for our future? What is the risk to our food supply, the planet's wildlife, the soil on which every life-form depends? Who much undeveloped, untrodden ground do we even have left? Paul Bogard set out to answer these questions in The Ground Beneath Us, and what he discovered is astounding. From New York (where more than 118,000,000 tons of human development rest on top of Manhattan Island) to Mexico City (which sinks inches each year into the Aztec ruins beneath it), Bogard shows us the weight of our cities' footprints. And as we see hallowed ground coughing up bullets at a Civil War battlefield; long-hidden remains emerging from below the sites of concentration camps; the dangerous, alluring power of fracking; the fragility of the giant redwoods, our planet's oldest living things; the surprises hidden under a Major League ballpark's grass; and the sublime beauty of our few remaining wildest places, one truth becomes blazingly clear-- the ground is the easiest resource to forget, and the last we should. Bogard's The Ground Beneath Us is deeply transporting reading that introduces farmers, geologists, ecologists, cartographers, and others in a quest to understand the importance of something too many of us take for granted-- dirt. From growth and to death and loss, and from the subsurface technologies that run our cities to the dwindling number of idyllic Edens that remain, this is the fascinating story of the ground beneath our feet.-- Dust jacket.
Subject Soil science.
Soil and civilization.
Earth sciences.
Underground ecology.
Earth sciences.
ISBN 9780316342261
0316342262
-->
Add a Review