Six degrees

our future on a hotter planet

No cover

Mark Lynas: Six degrees (2007, Fourth Estate)

358 pages

English language

Published Dec. 30, 2007 by Fourth Estate.

ISBN:
978-0-00-720904-0
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (1 review)

A well documented summary of studies relating to the effects of climate change. The chapters are organized by the effects on people, the economy,and the climate for every additional degree of temperature increase. The book is written for an educated layman and is quite interesting. Over half of the book is dedicated to an extensive bibliography which is very thorough and useful for further research.

2 editions

Review of 'Six Degrees' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

It will be interesting when we turn the COVID corner just what effect this last year has had on CO2 concentrations. I suspect it will prove we can contribute to improving our situation, and may convince people and governments to make further improvements. If they don't, we are screwed.

Not the planet, it will survive. It won't be a fun place to live, of course. The majority of species will be wiped out in a mass die-off that rivals the Permian extinction. The planet also won't sustain a population of 7 billion humans, either, and those deaths will be primarily by famine or war. Repeated natural disasters won't make life easy for those that do survive.

This was an interesting book, and was cited in another book I read more recently. The author surveyed a majority of papers modeling future climate and sorted those summaries into folders of 1-6 degrees …

Subjects

  • Global warming -- Environmental aspects -- Popular works
  • Climatic changes -- Environmental aspects -- Popular works