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David R. Montgomery

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David R. Montgomery

Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author


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The United States
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January 2017


David R. Montgomery is a MacArthur Fellow and professor of geomorphology at the University of Washington. He is an internationally recognized geologist who studies landscape evolution and the effects of geological processes on ecological systems and human societies. An author of award-winning popular-science books, he has been featured in documentary films, network and cable news, and on a wide variety of TV and radio programs, including NOVA, PBS NewsHour, Fox and Friends, and All Things Considered. When not writing or doing geology, he plays guitar and piano in the band Big Dirt. He lives in Seattle, with his wife Anne Biklé and their black lab guide-dog dropout Loki.

Growing A Revolution: Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ giveaway of advance copies

I just wrapped up the final edits to my new book, Growing A Revolution: Bringing Our Soil Back to Life.

It comes out May 9, and Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ is giving away 20 copies of the advanced edition at:

/giveaway/sh...

A great way to get a copy of the rarest edition... the one with the typos not fixed yet...
Read more of this blog post »
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Published on January 29, 2017 11:23
Average rating: 4.17 · 4,704 ratings · 690 reviews · 23 distinct works â€� Similar authors
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More books by David R. Montgomery…
Quotes by David R. Montgomery  (?)
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“re: the US agriculture industry: " This puts us in the odd position of consuming fossil fuels --geologically one of the rarest and most useful resources ever discovered-- to provide a substitute for dirt --the cheapest and most widely available agricultural input imaginable.”
David R. Montgomery
tags: soil

“Small societies are particularly vulnerable to disruption of key lifelines, such as trading relations, or to large perturbations like wars or natural disasters. Larger societies, with more diverse and extensive resources, can rush aid to disaster victims. But the complexity that brings resilience may also impede adaptation and change, producing social inertia that maintains collectively destructive behavior. Consequently, large societies have difficulty adapting to slow change and remain vulnerable to problems that eat away their foundation, such as soil erosion. In contrast, small systems are adaptable to shifting baselines but are acutely vulnerable to large perturbations. But unlike the first farmer-hunter-gatherers who could move around when their soil was used up, a global civilization cannot.”
David R. Montgomery, Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations

“People tend to assume that organic farming and sustainability go hand in hand. But that's not necessarily the case - and it hasn't been for most of history. While going organic has some big advantages, even today most organic farmers still rely on the plow - the chief culprit in the this story. Why? Because it provides cheap, reliable weed suppression." David Montgomery - Growing a Revolution”
David R. Montgomery, Growing a Revolution: Bringing Our Soil Back to Life

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