Image for 1493: how Europe's discovery of the Americas revolutionized trade, ecology and life on Earth

1493: how Europe's discovery of the Americas revolutionized trade, ecology and life on Earth

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Two hundred million years ago the earth consisted of a single vast continent, Pangea, surrounded by a great planetary sea.

Continental drift tore apart Pangaea, and for millennia the hemispheres were separate, evolving almost entirely different suites of plants and animals.

Columbus's arrival in the Americas brought together these long-separate worlds.

Many historians believe that this collision of ecosystems and cultures-the Columbian Exchange-was the most consequential event in human history since the Neolithic Revolution. And it was the most consequential event in biological history since the extinction of the dinosaurs.

Beginning with the world of microbes and moving up the species ladder to mankind, Mann rivetingly describes the profound effect this exchanging of species had on the culture of both continents.

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£74.80
Product Details
Granta
1847084400 / 9781847084408
eBook (EPUB)
909.4
01/09/2011
England
English
544 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
Description based on print version record.