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ISBN: PB: 9780226534237

University of Chicago Press

April 1999

324 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

22 colour plates, 4 halftones, 89 line drawings

PB:
£21,00
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Air Apparent

How Meteorologists Learned to Map, Predict, and Dramatize Weather

Weather maps have made our atmosphere visible, understandable, and at least moderately predictable. In "Air Apparent" Mark Monmonier traces debates among scientists eager to unravel the enigma of storms and global change, explains strategies for mapping the upper atmosphere and forecasting disaster, and discusses efforts to detect and control air pollution. Fascinating in its scope and detail, "Air Apparent" makes us take a second look at the weather map, an image that has been, and continues to be, central to our daily lives.

About the Author

Mark Monmonier is distinguished professor of geography at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. He has been editor of "The American Cartographer" and president of the American Cartographic Association, and has served on advisory panels for the National Research Council and the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Reviews

"Clever title, rewarding book. Monmonier... offers here a basic course in meteorology, which he presents gracefully by means of a history of weather maps" – Scientific American

"Mark Monmonier is onto a winner with 'Air Apparent'... It is good, accessible science and excellent history... Read it" – Fred Pearce, New Scientist

"['Air Apparent'] is a superb first reading for any backyard novice of weather... but even the veteran forecaster or researcher will find it engaging and, in some cases, enlightening" – Joe Venuti, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

"Monmonier is solid enough in his discussion of geographic and meteorological information to satisfy the experienced weather watcher. But even if this information were not presented in such a lively and engaging manner, it would still hook most any reader who checks the weather map every morning or who sits happily entranced through a full cycle of forecasts on the Weather Channel" – Michael Kennedy, Boston Globe