Material World
A Substantial Story of Our Past and Future
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Buy for $19.23
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Narrated by:
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Ed Conway
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By:
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Ed Conway
Brought to you by Penguin.
THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER
Sand, salt, iron, copper, oil and lithium. They built our world, and they will transform our future.
These are the six most crucial substances in human history. They took us from the Dark Ages to the present day. They power our computers and phones, build our homes and offices, and create life-saving medicines. But most of us take them completely for granted.
In Material World, Ed Conway travels the globe - from the sweltering depths of the deepest mine in Europe, to spotless silicon chip factories in Taiwan, to the eerie green pools where lithium originates - to uncover a secret world we rarely see. Revealing the true marvel of these substances, he follows the mind-boggling journeys, miraculous processes and little-known companies that turn the raw materials we all need into products of astonishing complexity.
As we wrestle with climate change, energy crises and the threat of new global conflict, Conway shows why these substances matter more than ever before, and how the hidden battle to control them will shape our geopolitical future. This is the story of civilisation - our ambitions and glory, innovations and appetites - from a new perspective: literally from the ground up.
'A compelling narrative of the human story' TIM MARSHALL, author of Prisoners of Geography
'Lively, rich and exciting... full of surprises' PETER FRANKOPAN, author of The Silk Roads
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Good food for thought about the world and material we rely on
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Excellent book
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Exceptional information which everyone should have
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I have worked in the field of material processing and industrial effluent research for most of my life,
But this is the book I wish someone wrote 30 years ago. It gives a laymans level window into this facinating foundation of human civilization, it benefits are obvious, the environmental challenges daunting and many of the socio-economic implications disturbing. Yet I feel the book gives a balanced view of all aspects.
I grew up picking copper ore along the rail lines of the Copperbelt in Zambia, then in the litteral shadow of one of those silicon smelters before they installed dust filter that capture the micro silica which is now a valued by-product. In my teens fish was dying from acidification of lakes and rivers. The local silicon plant is now "clean" and close to 80% of the energy is recuperated. Fishstocks in the lakes have returned (thank You Mrs Thatcher).
Humanity has been in tight spots before, and solved the problems. I think some of the stuff on the cost of getting to "net-zero" is especially important in the present partially polarized debate.
This is a book that will engage both scientists (social and technical), environmentalists, politicians and the curious minded layman.
Book of the year!
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Illuminating and rational.
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