15) A Short History of Nearly Everything, by Bill Bryson
As a lapsed scientist myself, not a huge amount of this book was new to me, but I can see why it is popular with people who have never had to crack open a science textbook since leaving school, or even with some who have. Bryson's chatty style, which hasn't always worked for me, carries us
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The devastation is enormous and the will to take action seems non-existant. Trying to gain protection for even small areas is hard and yet the gains are demonstrable, not just for conservation but for fishing as well.
As fast as we fish out our own resources, we descend on smaller countries and destroy their stocks too. And as for the deep oceans!
If ever the world needs diplomats, it's to find a way to conserve the world's fish stocks while there are still some stocks left to save.
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I still thoroughly enjoyed it and thought that it was really successful at doing what it set out to do and happily recommend it to people who are less scientifically literate than I am.
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Over-fishing is bad, and could conceivably be stopped. Ocean acidification (due to anthropogenic atmospheric CO2), on the other hand, is at least as bad for ocean ecosystems and is unstoppable.
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