World Beneath Our Feet

Regular price €31.99
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
A01=Frank Ashwood
America
animals
Arctic Tundra
Author_Frank Ashwood
biodiversity
botany
Canada
carbon cycle
Category=PSAF
Category=PST
Category=PSVA2
climate change
climate crisis
Darwin
deserts: rainforests
ecosystems
Environment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
evolution
forests
forthcoming
Greenland
japan
macrophotography
Merlin Sheldrake
natural history
natural world
nature
New Zealand
plants
Robert Macfarlane
Thomas Halliday
UK
Venezuela

Product details

  • ISBN 9781399742474
  • Dimensions: 156 x 240mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

'Thrilling and delightful' - George Monbiot

'Vital, brilliant, wholly absorbing... A masterpiece of science writing' - Isabella tree

To appreciate the wonders of the world around us, we're often told to look up. But what if we need to look down instead?

Everything that happens below ground sustains all life above it - yet we rarely think about this mysterious, dark underland. In The World Beneath Our Feet soil ecologist Frank Ashwood scratches the surface and takes us on an eye-opening safari through this precious ecosystem, from the ancient forests of New Zealand to the vast black soil deposits of the US and China. Every layer of the pedosphere is a world of its own, each more alien than the last as we travel deeper into the Earth.

The ground beneath our feet hums with a staggering abundance of winding roots, interconnecting fungal networks, wriggling creatures and mind-blowing microbial life. This hidden ecosystem is the single most biodiverse habitat on the planet. Half of all our species exist underfoot, and just a handful of soil can contain an entire world. Without soil, there would be no life as we know it.

In a story of connection and communication, we meet pioneering plants and minute animals that are essential to the health and wellbeing of our planet. We learn how soil makes our very existence possible, allowing us to cultivate crops as well as storing precious carbon and the water we need to survive. We marvel at soil as the Earth's fertiliser and one the building blocks of evolution, transforming decaying matter into the birthplace of new life.

The World Beneath Our Feet opens our eyes to the hidden, wondrous world of soil and invites us all to play a part in protecting it for future generations.

Dr Frank Ashwood is a soil ecologist and macrophotographer, specialising in soil invertebrates. He is a Lecturer of Ecology and Entomology at Lincoln University in New Zealand, and received his PhD from University of Lancashire in 2016. Frank has previously worked as a scientist for Forest Research, part of the British Government's Forestry Commission. He is Associate Editor of the New Zealand Journal of Zoology and member of the Royal Society of Biology. Frank has appeared on the BBC Earth Podcast, BBC Breakfast, ABC Landline, and his soil animal photography has been featured in the Guardian and the New York Times, and has been exhibited internationally.

More from this author