Gaia Vince becomes the first woman to win the Top science book prize

The most prestigious science book prize in Britain has been won by a solo female writer Gaia Vince for the first time in its 28-year history. Gaia Vince, a journalist and broadcaster based in London, was named the winner of the 2015 Royal Society Winton prize for Science Books at a ceremony in London.

The award puts her name at the top of a long list of previous winners that includes some of the greats of science writing, such as Stephen Hawking, Stephen Jay Gould, Jared Diamond, James Gleick and Bill Bryson.

Gaia Vince
  • Vince quit her job as an editor at the journal, Nature, to spend more than two years travelling the world to research her book, Adventures in the Anthropocene: a Journey to the Heart of the Planet We Made.
  • Vince sought out people and places most disrupted by humanity’s plundering of Earth’s resources.
  • She visited slums in Colombia, and clambered down a silver mine in Bolivia.
  • Vince becomes the first woman as sole author to win the Royal Society book prize, worth £25,000 this year.
  • The book is illustrated with photographs taken by Vince’s partner, Nick Pattinson, who captured remarkable shots.
  • In 1997, the award was given to Alan Walker and Pat Shipman, who co-wrote The Wisdom of Bones.

Anthropocene

Anthropocene was a proposed term for the present geological epoch (from the time of the Industrial Revolution onwards), during which humanity has begun to have a significant impact on the environment.

Meaning of Epoch – a particular period of time in history

What is Anthropology?

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Answer – The comparative study of human societies and cultures and their development.

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