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Earth

A dramatic twist to the Gaia hypothesis

James Lovelock's hypothesis that our planet is a living entity is well known. Ferris Jabr's new book Becoming Earth takes it a step further

By Kat Austen

21 August 2024

MH56FG View of Seoul city and autumn in Deoksugung palace

Seoul’s gingko trees help absorb the carbon dioxide produced by traffic

khanh nghia tran/Alamy

Becoming Earth
Ferris Jabr (Picador (UK); Penguin Random House (US))

Ginkgos were first planted in Seoul about 800 years ago. Today, over 100,000 of these giant trees take in carbon dioxide spewed out by the city’s traffic, exhaling the oxygen humans need to live. It is a coexistence with which we are familiar, yet it exemplifies a principle beyond daily experience.

In Becoming Earth: How our planet came to life, science writer Ferris Jabr weaves a tapestry out of the complex relationships that…

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