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Arctic Passages: Ice, Exploration, and the Battle for Power at the Top of the World [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 200 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Island Press
  • ISBN-10: 1642832073
  • ISBN-13: 9781642832075
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 200 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Island Press
  • ISBN-10: 1642832073
  • ISBN-13: 9781642832075
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Argues that today’s emerging geopolitical rivalries have roots in earlier waves of exploration and that the future prospect of a developed Arctic, with navigable passages to equal the Suez and Panama Canals, is drowning out the real impacts of warming on Arctic peoples, wildlife, and ecosystems. Maps.

Almost two centuries after British explorer Sir John Franklin and his men died amid paralyzing cold and ice in pursuit of the mythical Northwest Passage, the Arctic is melting at an alarming pace. Instead of working together to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, countries are racing to control newly ice-free waters and the riches in the seabed below. But by choosing self-interest over cooperative action, they may be condemning the world to an uninhabitable future.

Arctic Passages reminds us that while we go about our lives, climate change is unspooling slowly but insidiously, spawning extreme weather events that will be increasingly difficult to ignore. Ultimately, the fate of the Arctic will be decided by the developed world and how it decides to take action—if it’s not too late.


Almost two centuries after British explorer Sir John Franklin and his men died amid paralyzing cold and ice in pursuit of the mythical Northwest Passage, the Arctic—in response to temperatures greater than at any time in the last ten thousand years—is melting at an alarming pace. Instead of heeding this clear sign that the world must reduce greenhouse gas emissions to prevent runaway warming, countries such as the United States, Russia, China, and Canada are instead racing to control newly ice-free waters and the riches in the seabed below. But by choosing short-term self-interest over cooperative action, they may be condemning the world to an uninhabitable future.

Uniquely among books on climate change and the Arctic, Arctic Passages ties together past, present, and future, showing how historical fancies of a navigable Arctic are becoming future realities. In fast-paced storytelling packed with surprising revelations, journalist Kieran Mulvaney argues that today’s emerging geopolitical rivalries have roots in earlier waves of exploration and that the future prospect of a developed Arctic, with navigable passages to equal the Suez and Panama Canals, is drowning out the real impacts of warming on Arctic peoples, wildlife, and ecosystems. Mulvaney reminds us that while we go about our lives, climate change is unspooling slowly but insidiously, spawning extreme weather events that will be increasingly difficult to ignore. He asks: if governments shrug their shoulders at the five-alarm fire at the top of the world, what is the likelihood they’ll respond to the emerging climate crises across the rest of the planet?

Arctic Passages speaks to those fascinated by the potent intertwining of environmental and geopolitical issues. Ultimately, the fate of the Arctic will not be decided in the Arctic, but by the rest of the world and how it decides to take action—if it’s not too late.
Authors Note and Acknowledgments

 Prologue: Beginnings

Northwest
 Chapter
1. A Highway to Everything and Everywhere
 Chapter
2. The Place That Never Thaws
 Chapter
3. Manhattan in the Northwest Passage
 Chapter
4. The Faces of Franklin
 Chapter
5. Return to the Erebus
 Chapter
6. An Arctic Bridge and the Polar Bear Capital of the World

Northeast
 Chapter
7. Our Island Is Falling Apart
 Chapter
8. The Rise and Fall of Mangazeya
 Chapter
9. Red Arctic
 Chapter
10. Regulations and Reservations

North
 Chapter
11. On Top of the World
 Chapter
12. No Sea Unnavigable
 Chapter
13. Building a Polar Silk Road?
 Chapter
14. The Meaning of Ice
 Chapter
15. Voyage to the North Pole

 Epilogue: Futures

Further Reading