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Comets and the Origin and Evolution of Life (Advances in Astrobiology and Biogeophysics)


by Paul J. Thomas, Roland D. Hicks, Christopher F. Chyba, Christopher P. McKay

List Price: $115.00
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 921197
Studio: Springer
Binding: Hardcover
Number Of Pages: 346
Publication Date: September 14, 2006
Publisher: Springer


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description

Nine years after the publication of Comets and the Origin and Evolution of Life, one of the pioneering books in Astrobiology, this second edition revisits the role comets may have played in the origins and evolution of life. Recent analyses of Antarctic micrometeorites and ancient rocks in Australia and South Africa, the continuing progress in discovering complex organic macromolecules in comets, protostars and interstellar clouds, new insights into organic synthesis in comets, and numerical simulations of comet impacts on the Earth and other members of the solar system yield a spectacular wealth of new results.

This second edition is thus actually a new book. As the first edition it is intended as a comprehensive review of current research, accessible to graduate students and others new to the field. Each chapter was prepared by experts to give an overview of an aspect of the field, and carefully revised by the editors for uniformity in style and presentation.



CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 1 review)

Comets important in the evolution of biosphere  
Series of articles considering the role of comets in the evolution of Earth's biosphere. For example, A. Delsemme writes about The Origin of the Atmosphere and of the Oceans. It is argued that Earth's atmosphere and its oceans, as well as much of the carbon found in its biosphere, was brought to the Earth by comets. Although present-day impacts of comets are modest, in the first billion years, and especially first half billion years, of the Earth's existence, a large bombardment of comets occurred, as reflected by the cratering record observed on the Moon, Mars and Mercury. The cometary delivery of matter would explain the siderophile metals in the Earth's crust, and would explain how an ocean and atmosphere remained despite depletion by large body impacts.
November 26, 2000


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