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1

Sea-floor sediment and the age of the earth. El Cajon, Calif: Institute for Creation Research, 1996.

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2

Chudinov, I͡U V. Global eduction tectonics of the expanding earth. Utrecht: VSP, 1998.

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3

Soundings: The remarkable woman who mapped the ocean floor. New York, NY: Henry Holt and Co., 2012.

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4

Fire under the sea: The discovery of the most extraordinary environment on earth, volcanic hot springs on the ocean floor. New York: Quill W. Morrow, 1991.

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5

Cone, Joseph. Fire under the sea: The discovery of the most extraordinary environment on earth--volcanic hot springs on the ocean floor. New York: Morrow, 1991.

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6

Fire under the sea: The discovery of the most extraordinary environment on earth--volcanic hot springs on the ocean floor. New York: Morrow, 1991.

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7

Vrielynck, Bruno. The changing face of the Earth: The break-up of Pangaea and continental drift over the past 250 million years in ten steps. Paris, France: Commission for the Geological Map of the World, 2003.

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8

12 floors above the earth: Poems. Simsbury, Connecticut: Antrim House, 2012.

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9

Starkey, Lindsay. Encountering Water in Early Modern Europe and Beyond. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462988736.

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Both the Christian Bible and Aristotle’s works suggest that water should entirely flood the earth. Though many ancient, medieval, and early modern Europeans relied on these works to understand and explore the relationships between water and earth, sixteenth-century Europeans particularly were especially concerned with why dry land existed. This book investigates why they were so interested in water’s failure to submerge the earth when their predecessors had not been. Analyzing biblical commentaries as well as natural philosophical, geographical, and cosmographical texts from these periods, Lindsay Starkey shows that European sea voyages to the southern hemisphere combined with the traditional methods of European scholarship and religious reformations led sixteenth-century Europeans to reinterpret water and earth’s ontological and spatial relationships. The manner in which they did so also sheds light on how we can respond to our current water crisis before it is too late.
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10

Eggleston, Jack. Land subsidence and relative sea-level rise in the southern Chesapeake Bay region. Reston: United States Geological Survey, 2014.

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11

Mujumdar, P. P. Floods in a changing climate: Hydrologic modeling. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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12

Bedient, Philip B. Hydrology and floodplain analysis. 2nd ed. Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley, 1992.

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13

Charles, Huber Wayne, and Vieux Baxter E, eds. Hydrology and floodplain analysis. 4th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2008.

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14

Charles, Huber Wayne, ed. Hydrology and floodplain analysis. Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley, 1988.

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15

The Diluvian impact: The great flood catastrophe 10,000 years ago as the consequence of a comet's impact. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2000.

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16

Simonović, Slobodan P. Floods in a changing climate: Risk management. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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17

Floods in a changing climate: Inundation modelling. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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18

Teegavarapu, Ramesh S. V. Floods in a changing climate: Extreme precipitation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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19

M, Miller Ruby, ed. Natural disasters: Floods : a reference handbook. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2000.

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20

Wheeler, Richard S. The Richest Hill on Earth 18-Copy Floor Display. Forge, 2012.

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21

Livermore, Roy. Probably the Best Theory on Earth. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198717867.003.0002.

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The magnetic bar-code on the ocean floor provides convincing evidence of moving continents, yet, as with the discovery of the structure of DNA, few are convinced—at first. Drilling in the deep oceans and geochemical work at mid-ocean ridges provides further evidence in support of the Vine–Matthews Hypothesis. Application of the hypothesis to data collected in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans establishes sea-floor spreading as the process that creates new oceans and, in conjunction with reversals of the geomagnetic field, stamps the bar-code into the rocks beneath the sea bed.
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22

Isreal, Gesus E. Sacred food for the gods: "The Earth is Heaven's Floor". iUniverse, Inc., 2004.

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23

Isreal, Gesus E. Sacred food for the gods: "The Earth is Heaven's Floor". iUniverse, Inc., 2004.

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24

Sea Floor Observatories A New Vision Of The Earth From The Abyss. Springer, 2012.

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25

Upheaval from the Abyss: Ocean Floor Mapping and the Earth Science Revolution. Rutgers University Press, 2002.

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26

Vrielynck, Bruno, and Philippe Bouysse. The Changing Face of the Earth: The Break-up of Pangaea And Continental Drift over the Past 250 Million Years in Ten Steps (Earth Sciences). UNESCO, 2005.

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27

Soundings: The Story of the Remarkable Woman Who Mapped the Ocean Floor. Picador, 2013.

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28

Cone, Joseph. Fire Under the Sea: The Discovery of the Most Extraordinary Environment on Earth-Volcanic Hot Springs on the Ocean Floor. Quill, 1992.

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29

Flood (Violent Earth). Hodder Children's Books, 1994.

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30

Waterlow, Julia. Flood (Violent Earth). Hodder Wayland, 1992.

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31

Earth Observation for Flood Applications. Elsevier, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/c2019-0-00067-2.

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32

Livermore, Roy. Poles Apart. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198717867.003.0004.

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In just a few years, the magnetic bar-code secreted beneath the world’s oceans had provided detailed intelligence on the motions of the plates. When combined with other data from the sea floor, this allowed geophysicists to reconstruct the history of entire ocean basins following the rifting of Pangea. Some folk, however, are never happy, and ‘glass-half-empty’ types might well have complained that, impressive as all this was, it accounted for less than 200 million of the 4500 million years of Earth history, i.e. just 4%. What about that other 96%? Did plate tectonics operate through part or all of this long history and, in any case, how could you ever know, since the evidence had all been shredded by the closure of earlier oceans? There was hope: the same process that had so conveniently sequestered the recent history of the plates in the sea floor had also been at work throughout much of earlier geological time, recording the story in rocks onshore. By comparison with the high-definition picture of plate motions offered by bar-codes and fracture zones, this recording was monochrome, fuzzy, and incomplete. Yet, by the mid-1950s, it had already provided conclusive evidence that continents were truly mobile. Curiously, hardly anyone noticed.
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33

Wooton, Marianne, and Claudia Castellani. Crustacea: Copepoda. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199233267.003.0022.

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This chapter describes the taxonomy of copepods. Copepods are small aquatic crustaceans and are considered to be one of the most abundant and diverse multi-cellular organisms on earth. Populating a wide range of aquatic habitats, from the deep ocean floor to high Himalayan freshwater lakes, copepods have many free-living as well as highly modified parasitic forms. The chapter covers their life cycle, ecology, and general morphology. It includes a section that indicates the systematic placement of the taxon described within the tree of life, and lists the key marine representative illustrated in the chapter (usually to genus or family level). This section also provides information on the taxonomic authorities responsible for the classification adopted, recent changes which might have occurred, and lists relevant taxonomic sources.
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34

Trollinger, Susan L., and William Vance Trollinger. The Bible and Creationism. Edited by Paul C. Gutjahr. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190258849.013.2.

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Biblical creationism emerged in the late nineteenth century among conservative Protestants who were unable to square a plain, commonsensical, “literal” reading of the Bible with Charles Darwin’s theory of organic evolution. As this chapter details, over time a variety of increasingly literal “creationisms” have emerged. For the first century after Origin of Species (1859), old Earth creationism—which accepted mainstream geology—held sway. But with the 1961 publication of The Genesis Flood—Noah’s flood explains the geological strata—young Earth creationism took center stage. Waiting in the wings, however, is a geocentric creationism that rejects mainstream biology, geology, and cosmology.
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35

Modelling Uncertainty in Flood Forecasting Systems. Taylor & Francis Group, 2004.

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36

Maskey, Shreeda. Modelling Uncertainty in Flood Forecasting Systems. Taylor & Francis Group, 2004.

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37

Schumann, Guy J.-P. Earth Observation for Flood Applications: Progress and Perspectives. Elsevier, 2021.

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38

Geyer, Richard A., and Andrew Grasz. Handbook of Geophysical Exploration at Sea. 2nd ed. CRC-Press, 1992.

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39

A, Geyer Richard, ed. CRC handbook of geophysical exploration at sea. 2nd ed. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 1992.

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40

(Editor), Richard A. Geyer, and Margaret Ashwell (Editor), eds. Handbook of Geophysical Exploration at Sea. 2nd ed. CRC, 1991.

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41

Baker, Victor R. Interdisciplinarity and the Earth Sciences. Edited by Robert Frodeman. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198733522.013.8.

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The inherent interdisciplinary of the Earth sciences derives from combining aspects of other disciplines when studying the Earth. Though most commonly viewed as providing science-as-knowledge, the Earth sciences can yield greater societal benefit through their nature-directed transdisciplinarity. As an example, paleoflood hydrology involves a relating to the complexities of natural world that overcomes limitations imposed when simplifying reality in order to make predictions. Paleoflood hydrology discovers the natural recordings of ancient (but very real) cataclysmic processes that have the documented ability to cause harm. The commonsense recognition that what has actually happened can indeed happen again provides much more incentive to generate engaged and wise public action than does an abstract prediction of the so-called hundred-year flood. This kind of science differs from that of its constituent disciplines, and it has great potential for making progress on many issues of current societal concern through public education, communication, and guided policy.
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42

Crimmel, Sukita Reay. Earthen floors: A modern approach to an ancient practice. 2014.

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43

Trnka, Susanna. Traversing. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501749223.001.0001.

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This book is about our ways of seeing, experiencing, and moving through the world and how they shape the kinds of people we become. Drawing from concepts developed by two phenomenological philosophers, Martin Heidegger and Jan Patočka, and putting them in conversation with ethnographic analysis of the lives of contemporary Czechs, the book examines how embodiment is crucial for understanding our being-in-the-world. In particular, the book scrutinizes three kinds of movements we make as embodied actors in the world: how we move through time and space, be it by walking along city streets, gliding across the dance floor, or clicking our way through digital landscapes; how we move toward and away from one another, as erotic partners, family members, or fearful, ethnic “others”; and how we move toward ourselves and the earth we live on. Above all, the book focuses on tracing the ways in which the body and motion are fundamental to our lived experience of the world, so we can develop a better understanding of the empirical details of Czech society and what they can reveal to us about the human condition.
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44

Berman, Joshua A. Source Criticism and Its Biases: The Flood Narrative of Genesis 6–9. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190658809.003.0014.

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The division of the Genesis flood account is one of the most celebrated achievements of modern biblical criticism. This chapter takes a critical look at the source-critical paradigm and examines its hermeneutics. Historical-critical scholarship applies a series of double standards that all work in concert to support the source-critical aims and results. Moreover, it consistently suppresses evidence adduced from cognate materials—particularly from the Mesopotamian version of the flood story contained in Tablet XI of the Giglamesh epic—that threatens its validity by simply ignoring it, or otherwise negating the validity of that evidence through unwarranted means. Attention is given to the chiastic structure of the account, and to the parallel structure of the six days of creation and the drying of the earth after the flood. All in all, eight methodological flaws are detected in the source-critical approach to the story.
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45

Forecasting a flood. 2014.

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46

The Ninth Generation: Surviving The Giants Of The Pre-Flood Earth. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2011.

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47

Read, John G. Handbook Creation, the Flood and Historical Dating with a Critique on Atheistic Suppositions. Apocalypse Press, 2000.

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48

(Editor), Jiri Marsalek, Gheorghe Stancalie (Editor), and Gabor Balint (Editor), eds. Transboundary Floods: Reducing Risks Through Flood Management (Nato Science Series: IV: Earth and Environmental Sciences). Springer, 2006.

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49

(Editor), R. Ashley, S. Garvin (Editor), E. Pasche (Editor), A. Vassilopoulos (Editor), and C. Zevenbergen (Editor), eds. Advances in Urban Flood Management (Balkema--Proceedings and Monographs in Engineering, Water and Earth Sciences). Taylor & Francis, 2007.

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50

Rogue, Conrad. House of earth: A complete handbook for earthen construction : cob, straw-clay, adobe, earthbags, plasters, floors, paints. 2015.

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