It is rare for life to change Earth, yet three organisms have profoundly transformed our planet over the long course of its history. Elemental reveals how microbes, plants, and people used the fundamental building blocks of life to alter the climate, and with it, the trajectory of life on Earth in the past, present, and future.
Taking readers from the deep geologic past to our current era of human dominance, Stephen Porder focuses on five of life鈥檚 essential elements鈥攈ydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus. He describes how single-celled cyanobacteria and plants harnessed them to wildly proliferate across the oceans and the land, only to eventually precipitate environmental catastrophes. He then brings us to the present, and shows how these elements underpin the success of human civilization, and how their mismanagement threatens similarly catastrophic unintended consequences. But, Porder argues, if we can learn from our world-changing predecessors, we can construct a more sustainable future.
Blending conversational storytelling with the latest science, Porder takes us deep into the Amazon, across fresh lava flows in Hawaii, and to the cornfields of the American Midwest to illuminate a potential path to sustainability, informed by the constraints imposed by life鈥檚 essential elements and the four-billion-year history of life on Earth.
Stephen Porder is associate provost for sustainability and professor of ecology, evolution, and organismal biology at Brown University. He is also a fellow in the Institute at Brown for Environment and Society. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, Natural History, and other leading publications. He is cofounder of Possibly, which airs on The Public鈥檚 Radio and provides practical advice on sustainability to a general audience.
鈥淓ntertaining and enlightening, Elemental reframes the history of life and today鈥檚 environmental challenges through the basic building blocks of life鈥檚 formula鈥攁 mind expanding treat.鈥濃擠avid R. Montgomery, coauthor of The Hidden Half of Nature and What Your Food Ate
鈥淲hat makes life on Earth possible? A simple question, but as Stephen Porder shows us, the answer is fascinating, complex, and absolutely vital. Told through the relationship of microbes, plants, and humans to the elements that make us鈥攆rom phosphorus to carbon鈥攖his book introduces the chemical innovations that have shaped our planet. Part engaging tour through science at the intersection of biology and chemistry, part deep history that gives us tools for the future, Elemental gives us a lively look at the stuff of life itself.鈥濃擝athsheba Demuth, author of Floating Coast: An Environmental History of the Bering Strait
鈥泪苍 Elemental, Stephen Porder explains why humans are both part and parcel of an Earth system that has endured for billions of years and a rare departure from the norm. His engaging, accessible, and ultimately optimistic account illuminates the remarkable innovations of modern humans, their consequences for the Earth as a whole, and what we can do to safeguard our environmental future.鈥濃擜ndrew H. Knoll, author of A Brief History of Earth: Four Billion Years in Eight Chapters
鈥淧order鈥檚 accessible prose guides us through our planet鈥檚 intricate, elegant cycling of five life-sustaining elements. Through the lens of geologic time, humans鈥 capacity to alter these cycles is not unique, but our ability to shape the future is in our hands. Porder provides a critical, can-do perspective amidst the angst about the current climate emergency.鈥濃擱uth DeFries, author of What Would Nature Do? A Guide for Our Uncertain Times
鈥淪tephen Porder has written an accessible primer on the deep origins of Earth鈥檚 carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and phosphorous cycles鈥攖he remarkable but under-appreciated system of checks and balances that makes the world habitable. Elemental is essential reading for anyone who eats, breathes, or requires water, and a civics lesson on how we can all become better biogeochemical citizens.鈥濃擬arcia Bjornerud, author of Timefulness: How Thinking like a Geologist Can Help Save the World
鈥Elemental is both a history of life and a glimpse into the future. Stephen Porder offers a fascinating new perspective on why the planet鈥檚 in trouble and what we can do about it.鈥濃擡lizabeth Kolbert, author of The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History