Detonation: Explosives, Nitrates, and the Making of the Modern World (cape Books)

Detonation: Explosives, Nitrates, and the Making of the Modern World (cape Books)

by (add) Stephen R. Bowen

Length:
141Kwords20chapters
Latest:
Ch. 20索引
Activity:
Updated 11mo agoScraped 15d ago
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About This Novel

A history of explosives, but also a history of human nature full of contradictions and struggles. With the sharp rise in explosive consumption, countries around the world have launched fierce competition around the scarce natural resource of saltpeter. It can be said that the value of saltpeter in the 19th century is no less than that of oil in the 21st century. Both are the underlying causes of international competition and power struggles. In order to get rid of the constraints of resources, German scientist Fritz Haber solved the technical problem of artificial nitrogen fixation. This breakthrough became the basis for the Green Revolution, which allowed the population to grow dramatically. Haber also developed poison gas during the war and is considered the father of gas warfare. For this reason, when he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, the international community expressed strong indignation and condemnation. This book tells a story about human beings, including their obsession with science, their trampling on morality, and the inherent irony of history. This story proves that humans can burst into amazing creativity during war, and it also reminds us that history is cyclical, and past solutions often create new problems that need to be solved.

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