The nominees for the 3rd annual Lane Anderson Award for Canadian science writing have been announced.
Harry Thurston, an Atlantic Canadian author, has made it to this year’s finalists for his The Atlantic Coast: a natural history (M).
Filled with stunning photographs, the book includes chapters on the geological origins of this region, the two major forest realms, and the main freshwater and marine ecosystems and also describes the flora and fauna within each of these habitats. Finally, it looks at what has been lost but also what remains of the natural heritage of the region and how that might be conserved in future.” publisher
Also nominated are:
Strange New Worlds: the search for alien planets and life beyond our solar system (M)
by Ray Jayawardhana
Astronomers expect to find alien earths by the dozens within the next three years, and to take their spectra, looking for telltale signs of life, before this decade is out. If they succeed, the ramifications for all areas of human thought and endeavour, from religion and philosophy to art and biology, are profound, if not revolutionary. What’s at stake is a true measure of our own place in the cosmos.” publisher
Cascadia’s Fault: the deadly earthquake that will devastate North America (M)
by Jerry Thompson
The Cascadia Subduction Zone is virtually identical to the offshore fault that wrecked Sumatra in 2004, and it will generate the same type of earthquake, a magnitude nine or higher. It will send crippling shock waves across a far wider area than any of the California quakes you’ve ever heard about, slamming five cities at the same time: Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Portland and Sacramento. Cascadia’s fault will wreck dozens of smaller towns and coastal villages — and no one in these places will be able to call their neighbours for help.” publisher
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2012/08/lane-anderson-science-writing-award-2012.html