Alfred W. Crosby
Children of the Sun
A History of Humanity's Unappeasable Appetite for Energy
A master historian's spirited survey of
humanity's strategies for tapping sun
energy, past and future.
WE DON'T OFTEN RECOGNIZE the humble activity
of cooking for the revolutionary cultural adaptation
that it is. But when the hearth fires started
burning in the Paleolithic, humankind broadened the
exploitation of food and initiated an avalanche of
change. And we don't often associate cooking with
drilling for oil, but both are innovations that allow us
to tap the sun energy accumulated in organic matter.
Alfred W. Crosby, a founder of the field of global
history, reveals how humanity's successes hinge
directly on effective uses of sun energy. But dwindling
natural resources, global warming, and environmental
pollution all testify to the limits of our fossil-fuel civilization.
Although we haven't yet adopted a feasible
alternativejust look at the embarrassment of "cold
fusion" or the 2003 blackout that humbled North
Americaour ingenuity and adaptability as a species
give us hope.
ALFRED W. CROSBY, author of the
groundbreaking work The Columbian Exchange:
Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492, is
professor emeritus of history, geography, and
American studies at the University of Texas
at Austin.
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