Travels in Oceania, and Elsewhere

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Travels in Oceania, and Elsewhere Author: Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
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Pages: 116 Illustrations and other contents: II, 116 p. Language: English ISBN: 9783032241474 Categories: , ,

This book is a hybrid, part academic part autobiography, containing accounts of marine geological and oceanographic work, geographical accounts and impressions of places visited, personal recollections of activities undertaken, and comments on situations encountered. Apart from the Introduction, the period covered is from the mid-1960s up to almost the present, more than 50 years. During this period, working practices at sea have changed considerably, as have many of the places visited. An attempt is made to describe and account for these changes. The region covered in most detail is the South Pacific, including its islands. At the beginning of the period, many of these were still colonial territories, but all gained their independence by the end of the 20th century. This was often accompanied by social and political upheaval, and an attempt is made to describe this and the reasons for it; in essence, a comparison of “The Old Pacific” with its more modern counterpart. Finally, the book can be considered in some respects to be a travelogue, of interest to people considering visiting any of the places mentioned and wishing to compare how they are now with how they were in the past. Unique features, compared with other books are: a) the wide geographical area covered, b) the long time period covered, and c) the degree of personal involvement with both the places and activities described.

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Author Biography

David Cronan has been involved in marine geology since the 1960s, during which time he has travelled extensively in all three major oceans, Pacific, Atlantic and Indian. He was introduced to the subject at Durham University, continued with it at Oxford University, and received a Doctorate in it at Imperial College's Royal School of Mines in 1967. After a brief spell working on the UK continental shelf for the British Geological Survey, he moved to a faculty position at the University of Ottawa, where he developed his interests in deep-sea sediments and minerals in collaboration with several Canadian and US institutions. In the mid-1970s, he was invited back to the Royal School of Mines, where he is now an Emeritus Professor, to direct teaching and research in the then newly established subject of applied marine geochemistry. It was in conjunction with this that almost all the travels described in this book were conducted.