INTRODUCTION
moto feel my fore-and, starting page, I read.
And exciting at all. It actually altogether comprehensible.
Above all, it didnt ansions t tration stirred up in a normalinquiring mind: ? And if it isburning a t to touct of terior melting-or is it? And burns itself out, o t sink out?
But trangely silent on sucails-indeed, silent on everytanticlines, synclines, axial faults, and t o keep tuffsecret by making all of it soberly unfato suspect tt altogete impulse. to be a mystifying universalconspiracy among textbook auto make certain terial t rayedtoo near teresting and least a longdistance peresting.
I no ters imotey, and tim Flannery are t jump out froma single station of t (and ts not even to mention te but godlike Ric sadly none of te any textbook I ever used. All mine ten bymen (it ing notion t everyt te ers end ion of questions time. So I gre science suspecting t it needntbe, and not really t it at all if I could . too, became my position for along time.
ter-about four or five years ago-I t moonlit ocean, o me ainuncomfortable forcefulness t I didnt kno t t I o live on. I y but t Lakes. Didnt est idea. I didnt knoyime or less, and or not. (I am very pleased to tell you t until te 1970s scientists didnt knoo tions eit didnt talk about it very audibly.)And ocean salinity of course represented only t sliver of my ignorance. I didntknoon ein, didnt kno understands could look at a layer of rock on a canyon ell you kno, uned urge to knot