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The Universe Below [Hardcover]

William J Broad (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)


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Library Binding $36.95  
Hardcover, April 17, 1997 --  
Paperback $27.95  

Book Description

April 17, 1997
The deep sea is teeming with life, most of which has gone unseen by human eyes. Scientists are beginning to explore this fascinating realm of unusual sea creatures and volatile volcanos, using once-secret military technology now freed up by the end of the Cold War. See the timeline for a short history of this. In the Universe Below, William Broad takes a fresh look at this recent surge of exploration and discovery, and brings his readers along on some of his journeys into the deep.

In 1993, author William Broad joined scientists on a two-week expedition off the Oregon/Washington coast. Their aim was to examine the Juan de Fuca Ridge and to study how volcanic heat spawns life on the ocean floor. The crew voyaged 250 miles off-shore on a 210-feet long carrier ship, The Atlantis II, which each day lowered three members 1.5 miles into the deep via Alvin, a 25-feet long submersible vessel.
* * *

Links Meet Alvin
Garden of Eden
Chimneys of the Deep Sea
A Brief Chronology of Sea Exploration

* * *

Pulitzer Prize winner William J. Broad takes us on an epic journey to the planet's last and most exotic frontier -- the depths of the sea. The Universe Below examines how we are illuminating its dark recesses in a rush of discovery, uncovering hidden worlds of alien creatures, living fossils, lost treasures, precious metals, and perhaps even the place where life itself first arose billions of years ago.

Broad takes us on breathtaking dives and expeditions -- to the Azores, to the Titanic,., to hot springs teeming with bizarre life, to icy fissures aswarm with gulper eels, vampire squids, and gelatinous beasts longer than a city bus. We meet legendary explorers at the forefront of deep research and go with them as they probe the ancient mysteries of the deep. This universe below encompasses the vast majority of the Earth's habitable space and nurtures perhaps ten times as many species of life as are known on land. Broad shows that the abyss also holds millions of humanity's lost artworks and treasures -- more than all the world's museums combined. Yet, remarkably, human eyes up to now have glimpsed perhaps only a billionth of this unfamiliar realm, a place of crushing pressure and eternal darkness.

Drawing on extensive fieldwork, including hundreds of talks and interviews, Broad takes us to the cutting edge of the exploratory surge and reveals how it is powered by a wave of once-secret technologies. At a cost of untold billions, the United States, the Soviet Union, France, and othercold-war contestants forged these marvels to spy and fight and plunder the deep. Today, these wonders and the poeple who made and ran them are catalyzing an unprecedented speedup in civilian efforts to illuminate the inky depths.

Broad shows how the rush into the deep is revealing not only great mysteries and riches but great dangers as well, including the deadly radioactive debris of the cold war. Deep pollution, mining, and fishing threaten this frontier with ecological upset and species extinction. We will either destroy the sea through ignorance or save it, and ourselves, with the kinds of knowledge we are now gaining in the exploratory speedup.

The Universe Below is an unforgettable journey to the universe in our own backyard.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Sometimes truth is indeed stranger than fiction. Fifty-foot-long sea serpents do exist, as it turns out, though without the baneful intentions that mythology has ascribed to them. The Universe Below examines the awe-inspiring and little-known worlds that lurk in the deep seas, often more than a mile beneath the waves. Author William Broad gives a highly personal account of undersea explorations that scouted out everything from bizarre life forms feeding off of scalding vents at the bottom of the ocean to 16th-century shipwrecks filled with cultural artifacts and perhaps even gold. Broad's book is meticulously researched and full of surprising discoveries about the unseen undersea world.

From Library Journal

The deep sea is the last frontier whose secrets are just now being revealed. Broad, a Pulitzer Prize-winning science writer for the New York Times, offers an excellent personal overview of current explorations. As in his earlier works, technology is the focus, along with the personalities involved; most of the chapters are related to articles Broad has published in the Times since 1993. After a brief history of deep-sea exploration before 1900, the book is set firmly in the 20th century, concentrating on the ships, subs, divers, underwater vehicles both manned and robotic, and satellites used in a variety of applications, from discovering the Titanic to observing unusual or new marine species. As a readable introduction to deep-water oceanographic research and recovery techniques, this is recommended for public libraries.?Jean E. Crampon, Hancock Biology & Oceanography Lib., Univ. of California, Los Angeles
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; First Edition edition (April 17, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0684811081
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684811086
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.7 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,854,977 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author





William J. Broad is a best-selling author and a senior writer at The New York Times. In more than thirty years as a science journalist, he has written hundreds of front-page articles and won every major journalistic award in print and film. A writer of unusual depth and breadth, he has reported on everything from exploding stars and the secret life of marine mammals to the spread of nuclear arms and why the Titanic sank so fast. His journalism is featured in The Best American Science Writing. The yearly anthologies include articles of his on the reversal of the earth's magnetic field and the atmospheric history of carbon dioxide.

He joined The Times in 1983 and before that worked in Washington for Science, the magazine of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, doing so from 1978 to 1983.

Broad has won two Pulitzer Prizes with Times colleagues, as well as an Emmy and a DuPont. He won the Pulitzers for coverage of the space shuttle Challenger disaster and the feasibility of antimissile arms. In 2002, he won the Emmy (PBS Nova) for a documentary that detailed the threat of germ terrorism, based on his best-selling book Germs. He was a Pulitzer finalist in 2005 for articles written with Times colleague David E. Sanger on nuclear proliferation. In 2007, he shared a DuPont Award (The Discovery Channel) from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism for the television documentary, "Nuclear Jihad: Can Terrorists Get the Bomb?"

Broad is the author or co-author of seven books, most recently The Oracle: The Lost Secrets and Hidden Message of Ancient Delphi (The Penguin Press, 2006). Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War (Simon & Schuster, 2001) was a number-one New York Times bestseller. His books have been translated into more than a dozen languages. His other titles include The Universe Below: Discovering the Secrets of the Deep Sea (Simon & Schuster, 1997); Teller's War: The Top-Secret Story Behind the Star Wars Deception (Simon & Schuster, 1992); and Betrayers of the Truth: Fraud and Deceit in the Halls of Science (Simon & Schuster, 1982).

Broad's reporting has taken him to Paris and Vienna, Brazil and Ecuador, Kiev and Kazakhstan. In December 1991, he was among the last Westerners to see the Soviet hammer and sickle flying over the Kremlin.

Broad's media appearances include Larry King Live, The Charlie Rose Show, The Discovery Channel, Nova, The History Channel, and National Public Radio. His speaking engagements have ranged from the U.S. Navy in Washington, to the Knickerbocker Club in New York, to the Monterey Aquarium in California. He has also given talks at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. and the Council on Foreign Relations in New York City.

Broad earned a masters degree in the History of Science from the University of Wisconsin at Madison and lives with his wife and children in the New York metropolitan area.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fascinating world, opened by new technologies, September 6, 2004
By 
Robert J. Crawford (Balmette Talloires, France) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Universe Below (Hardcover)
This is the story of how technology has opened a new frontier of science, much as van Leeuwenhoek did with the microscope. Broad reports on how the mysteries of the deepest oceans are opening up to our eyes with mini-supersubs, sonar devices, and robots. Much of this revolution is due, he says, to the end of the Cold War, which allowed us to put them to scientific rather than miltary purposes.

The world they discovered may harbor the most diverse forms of life on the planet, in environments hostile beyone imagination. Broad introduces us to an incredible gallery of exotic creatures, from hypothermophiles - bacteria that live in lava-heated water of 400 degrees F - to countless species of squid and manowars. Braod also accompanies treasure hunters as they explore for ancient artifacts and rare minerals.

THe book is part history, part primer in technology, and part environmental tract, and the skill with which Broad combines these concerns whows why he won the Pulitzer twice. It is also poetically written.

Highest recommendation. This book can ignite the imagination for a lifetime.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An extraordinary chronicle of deep-ocean exploration., March 3, 1999
The Last Great Wilderness

THE UNIVERSE BELOW: Discovering the Secrets of the Deep Sea. Reviewed by Capt. Gordon I. Peterson, USN (Ret.),Senior Editor, Sea Power Magazine

The International Year of the Ocean (YOTO) in 1998 sought to publicize the critical role the oceans play in shaping the life of the planet. William J. Broad, a science reporter for The New York Times since 1983, has made a masterful contribution to that goal in his fifth book, The Universe Below, a fascinating chronicle of the ongoing rush of discovery aimed at learning more about the largest unexplored part of the planet: the deep sea-which, in Broad's view, represents the world's "last great wilderness."

Broad's work, the product of more than a decade of journalistic research, interviews, and firsthand experience, offers a gripping account of past, present and future efforts to unlock the secrets of the oceanic depths lying beyond the shallow borders of the world's continental land masses. These deep oceans encompass roughly 65 percent of the earth's surface; devoid of sunlight, they are estimated to occupy 97 percent of the space inhabited by Earth's living things.

More than 500 years have elapsed since the beginning of the Age of Discovery's epic voyages of exploration. But, Broad asserts, "The truth is that our planet has managed to remain largely unexplored, until now." Contrary to the popular and scientific misconceptions of past centuries, the waters and seabeds of the deep are teeming with life. Broad, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner, reveals how this strange and remote undersea environment is only now beginning to be understood as its secrets are slowly discovered and deciphered.

Following an informative survey of how scientists and seafarers of many nations had labored for centuries to understand the mysteries of the depths, Broad describes in considerable detail the U.S. Navy's pioneering efforts in deep-ocean research and operations, primarily through the use of manned submersibles, during the long years of the cold war. The Office of Naval Research (ONR) contracted for use of Auguste Piccard's bathyscaph Trieste in 1957, and purchased the craft the following year.

In the competition for budget dollars, these early years of the U.S. Navy's deep-ocean research are described as a love-hate affair within the upper echelons on the Navy. To the consternation of the Navy's undersea explorers and scientists, Trieste was retired in 1961. Her retirement was short-lived, however. Broad explains how the tragic loss of the nuclear-powered submarine USS Thresher in 1963, and Trieste's five-month search for its wreckage, generated a major reassessment of Navy policy.

This appraisal led to far-reaching improvements in the Navy's deep-sea capabilities during the decade that followed, beginning with the christening of the submersible Alvin in 1964. Other craft followed, including the nuclear-powered research submarine NR-1, the Deep-Submergence Rescue Vehicles (DSRVs) Mystic and Avalon, the more advanced manned submersibles Turtle and Sea Cliff, and modern surface ships designed and built specifically to support undersea operations and research. New and more advanced scientific instruments and systems, underwater robots, navigation techniques, and sonar technologies also were pioneered during this era.

In a chapter titled, "The Battle Zone," Broad draws on numerous interviews, declassified documents, and previously published accounts to relate how these developments enabled the Navy to wage an intentionally unpublicized but highly successful campaign to gather information about Soviet equipment and weapons, and even retrieve some from the seabed. The full story details may never be made public, Broad states, but he provides abundant evidence to support evidence to support the claim of some analysts that the U.S. Navy's deep-sea feats were the West's greatest intelligence coup in four decades of spying on the USSR.

With the end of the Cold War and a shift in U.S. geopolitical strategy, an unintended peace dividend emerged when the equipment and technologies essential to of the U.S. Navy's covert operations gradually became available the nation's (and allied) to civilian research, academic, and commercial sectors. Fleet attack submarines were enrolled in well-publicized scientific research. The previous tight security about the U.S. Navy's worldwide array of undersea microphones was relaxed, and scientists were afforded a revealing window to the deep through access to the Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS). Meanwhile, faced with its own internal adjustments and economic realities, Russia began to sell or rent its equipment and fleets of submersibles and surface ships to foreigners.

In successive chapters, enriched with accounts of his own participation on several expeditions, Broad explains how access to these new technologies and instruments has led to a rapidly accelerating growth in underwater exploration and exploitation. The world has indeed entered a new era. The deep sea comes to life as Broad takes the reader on numerous diving expeditions around the globe, from the wreckage of the Titanic to the lost relics of earlier ages and the current, still, ongoing exploration of California's Monterey Canyon.

The U.S. Navy has retired several of its submersibles, and Broad thoroughly documents the increasingly important oceanic research role played by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and the nation's other public and private oceanographic research centers. The now-enthralled readers learns of, and from, Broad's firsthand experiences during the exploration of deep volcanism on the ocean's floor-and the observance of the literally hundreds of different animal species flourishing there, many of them new to science. Heat-loving microbes, considered the likely ancestors of all life of Earth, thrive in temperatures in excess of 500 degrees Fahrenheit. Broad explains how microbial research will soon be opening new doors in the understanding of genetics and the development of genetic tools to help cure numerous diseases.

Broad paints a compelling portrait of how new technologies open undersea possibilities that are often a double-edged sword. The uneasy balance between commercial salvors and marine archeologists has been upset with the ascendancy of commercial teams and treasure hunters. Slow-growing stocks of fish from the deep sea have been exploited dangerously through overfishing, with little understanding of long-term consequences, he also points out. Increasing numbers of small countries, private firms, and individuals will have access to the deep in the years to come. Yet, the effects of pollution, ocean warming, and falling levels of plankton, and of surface fish, all project uncertain consequences for the deep oceans.

Broad makes a convincing argument that the emerging benefits tied to exploitation of the deep must be weighed carefully against the risks. It is important to address these issues in a serious way, he emphasizes-possibly by strengthening the public sector so it may better guide the private one. In his mind, a prudent step toward proper ecological stewardship would be to place entire regions of the deep off limits to deep fishing, seabed mining, and other commercial development.

Broad clearly has done his homework. He explains the minutiae of undersea biology, geology, and oceanography in a fluent, authoritative style that will appeal to a wide range of readers. The text is graced with profuse and elegant illustrations by artist Dimitry Schidlovsky; Broad explains that reproduction of undersea photography is inadequate to depict the incredible sights of the deep's geology, fauna, and unusual living inhabitants. He supplements his captivating narrative with a chronology of deep exploration, a generous glossary, informative end notes, and a comprehensive bibliography.

Most living things on planet Earth reside in the sea, Broad writes, but mankind still knows precious little of those occupying the darkened waters of the deep oceans. The current transformation in oceanographic research is similar to the age of global exploration launched 500 years ago, he says, but the push is now downward, not outward-with new advances already in the works and most of the last great remaining wilderness to be explored.

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A lively introduction to deep sea exploration, July 18, 2002
By 
This review is from: The Universe Below (Hardcover)
In this wide-ranging volume, New York Times science writer Broad shows us different dimensions of the deep sea. He covers scientific exploration of deep sea life and hydrothermal vents, military activities including intelligence gathering and the search for a lost H-bomb, mineral exploration, and treasure-seeking. While none of his chapters offer comprehensive coverage, they do whet the appetite. Broad's writing style is lively and sometimes personal. The illustrations by Dmitry Schidlovsky may be artistically interesting, but photographs and maps would have been more useful.
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First Sentence:
THE SURFACE of the sea, with its play of light and changing moods, its sudden storms and fiery sunsets, was seen from the beginning as a thing of beauty and terror, a giver and taker of life. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
monster scope, undersea gear, azoic theory, undersea microphones, science basket, laser line scanner, seabed materials, suction arm, polymetallic sulfides, rocky seabed, nuclear torpedoes, intact ships, deep creatures, deep fishing, piloted craft, volcanic rifts, deep exploration, manganese nodules, hot vents, marine snow, seabed mining, icy darkness, deep inquiry, universe below, deep life
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Woods Hole, Top Lab, United Nations, New Zealand, New York, Angra Bay, Monterey Bay, Moss Landing, Reagan Administration, Monterey Canyon, West Coast, San Diego, American Navy, Cape Cod, David Packard, Juan de Fuca Ridge, San Francisco, The Hole, University of Washington, World War Two, Soviet Union, Chatham Rise, London Convention, New Orleans
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