FROZEN IN AN HOUR
THE REAL SCIENCE OF EARTH'S SUDDEN CLIMATE SHIFTS
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Q L CRICHTON
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
How does a six-ton woolly mammoth freeze so quickly that undigested plants remain in its stomach? Why do tropical fossils exist beneath Antarctic ice? And how stable is the planet we assume changes only slowly over millions of years?
Frozen in an Hour is a nonfiction investigation into Earth’s capacity for sudden, extreme environmental change. Drawing from geology, paleoclimatology, geophysics, and atmospheric science, this book examines the evidence that our planet’s climate and geography have, at times, shifted far more rapidly than conventional narratives suggest.
Rather than speculation or alarmism, this work focuses on what the evidence actually shows, clearly separating established science from unresolved debate. Readers are guided through the mechanisms capable of triggering abrupt climate reversals, including magnetic field instability, ocean circulation collapse, rapid atmospheric shifts, volcanic winters, and large-scale mass redistribution across the planet.
Inside this book, you will explore:
• Flash-frozen megafauna and what their preservation truly implies
• Sudden cooling events such as the Younger Dryas and other abrupt climate reversals
• Earth’s weakening and shifting magnetic field and its potential environmental influence
• How jet stream disruption and ocean current shutdowns can rapidly freeze entire regions
• Evidence of ancient warm climates at today’s poles
• The science behind equator migration and shifting climate zones
• What happens before, during, and after extreme freezing events
• What modern infrastructure and civilization would face under rapid climate stress
Frozen in an Hour does not claim the Earth is on the verge of imminent catastrophe. Instead, it provides a sober examination of Earth’s past behavior, showing that the planet is capable of dramatic change when critical thresholds are crossed. The geological record reveals that stability is not permanent, and that rapid environmental shifts are part of Earth’s long history.
Written in clear, accessible language, this book is designed for curious readers who want scientific depth without academic obscurity. It is ideal for anyone interested in Earth science, climate history, natural disasters, or the forces that quietly shape the world beneath our feet.
This is not a story of fear.
It is a story of evidence.
Understanding how Earth has changed before is essential to understanding what is possible next.