OceThe OFFiciaaL MaganZineog OF the Oceanographyra Spocietyhy CITATION Read, A.J. 2008. Review of The Unnatural History of the Sea, by C.M. Roberts. Oceanography 21(1):112–113, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2008.76. COPYRIGHT This article has been published inOceanography , Volume 21, Number 1, a quarterly journal of The Oceanography Society. Copyright 2008 by The Oceanography Society. All rights reserved. USAGE Permission is granted to copy this article for use in teaching and research. Republication, systematic reproduction, or collective redistribution of any portion of this article by photocopy machine, reposting, or other means is permitted only with the approval of The Oceanography Society. Send all correspondence to:
[email protected] or The Oceanography Society, PO Box 1931, Rockville, MD 20849-1931, USA. doWNLoaded From WWW.tos.org/oceanography ment of the GBR compared with many morphological impacts resulting from terrestrial national parks. The final part climate change on the GBR. NICK HARVEY (nicholas.harvey@ of this chapter reflects on the importance Overall, I think the book is an excel- adelaide.edu.au) is the Executive Dean, of global climate change and the impact lent synthesis of current knowledge on Faculty of Humanities and Social of projected sea-level rise on the GBR the geomorphology of the Great Barrier Sciences, and Professor, Geography and from a geomorphological perspective. Reef. While I agree with the authors that Environmental Studies, The University of This discussion is very relevant for the understanding geomorphological reef Adelaide, South Australia. current global debate on the impacts processes is very important in the man- of climate change such as the Fourth agement of the GBR, I don’t think that REFERENCES Assessment of the Intergovernmental this book alone will convince managers Parry, M.L., O.F.