On August 27, 1883, the island of Krakatoa disintegrated in a blast so loud it ruptured eardrums 40 miles away and was heard 3,000 miles across the ocean. It was the loudest sound in recorded history. But the shockwave didn't just travel through the air; it traveled through the newly laid submarine telegraph cables. "The Scream of the Earth" argues that Krakatoa was not just a geological disaster, but the first true global media event. For the first time in human history, news traveled faster than the wind. People in London knew about the tidal waves in Java before the smoke had cleared. The eruption turned sunsets red around the globe, inspired Edvard Munch's "The Scream," and sparked a scientific revolution in understanding the jet stream. This narrative history connects the dots between a volcano in the Sunda Strait and the birth of the interconnected world. It explores how a natural catastrophe forced humanity to realize, for the very first time, that we all share the same atmosphere and the same fate. It is a story of terrifying power, early globalization, and the day the world got smaller.



Autorentext

Author

Titel
Scream of the Earth
Untertitel
The Eruption That Birthed the Global Village and Deafened the World
EAN
9783565260775
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
20.02.2026
Digitaler Kopierschutz
frei
Dateigrösse
0.75 MB
Anzahl Seiten
161