The hadal zone : life in the deepest oceans / Alan Jamieson.
Publication details: Cambridge: Camnbridge University Press, 2015.Description: xv, 372 p. : illustrationsISBN:- 9781107016743 (hardback)
- 578.779 Q5
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Books | Mahatma Gandhi University Library General Stacks | 578.779 Q5 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 56793 |
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578.09 Q0 Biogeography / | 578.62 Q3 Invasive species: | 578.752 P7 Island biogeography: | 578.779 Q5 The hadal zone : | 579 N31 Microbiology: concepts and applications | 579 N33 Microbiology/ | 579 P92 Environmental microbiology / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 322-362) and index.
Machine generated contents note: Preface; Part I. History, Geology and Technology: Introduction; 1. The history of hadal science and exploration; 2. Geography and geology; 3. Full ocean depth technology; Part II. Environmental Conditions and Physiological Adaptations: Introduction; 4. The hadal environment; 5. Hydrostatic pressure; 6. Food supply to the trenches; Part III. The Hadal Community: Introduction; 7. Microbes, protists and worms; 8. Porifera, mollusca and echinodermata; 9. Crustacea; 10. Cnidaria and fish; Part IV. Patterns and Current Perspectives: Introduction; 11. Ecology and evolution; 12. Current perspectives; Appendix; References; Index.
"The hadal zone represents one of the last great frontiers in marine science, accounting for 45% of the total ocean depth range. Despite very little research effort since the 1950s, the last ten years has seen a renaissance in hadal exploration, almost certainly as a result of technological advances that have made this otherwise largely inaccessible frontier, a viable subject for research. Providing an overview of the geology involved in trench formation, the hydrography and food supply, this book details all that is currently known about organisms at hadal depths and linkages to the better known abyssal and bathyal depths. New insights on how, where and what really survives and thrives in the deepest biozone are provided, allowing this region to be considered when dealing with sustainability and conservation issues in the marine environment"--
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