Few of us will ever get to Antarctica. The bitter cold and three months
a year without sunlight makes the sixth continent virtually
uninhabitable for humans. Yet marine biologist James B. McClintock has
spent three decades studying the frozen land in order to understand
better the world that lies beneath it. In this luminous and closely
observed account, one of the world's leading experts on Antarctica
introduces the reader to this fascinating world--the extraordinary
wildlife that persists despite the harsh conditions and the way each of
the pieces fit into the puzzle of the intricate environment: from
single-celled organisms to baleen whales, with leopard seals, penguins,
50-foot algae, sea spiders, coral, and multicolored sea stars, in
between. Now, as temperatures rise, the fragile ecosystem is under
attack. Adélie penguins that have successfully nested on Antarctic
islands for several hundred years have been nearly wiped out. King crabs
that used to populate the deep seafloor are moving into shallower
waters, disturbing the set order of life there. Lost Antarctica is an
appeal to understand and appreciate the wondrous place at the bottom of
the world that we are on the brink of losing.