[Note: This is a new section from the rough draft of Wild, Free, & Happy. It’s finally getting closer to the home stretch. These samples start with sample 01, and follow the sequence listed HERE (if you happen to have some free time).
Welcome
to the Anthropocene
Scientists enjoy categorizing, ranking, and naming. In the realm of Earth history, they have
broken the process down into a series of epochs — like the Pliocene,
Pleistocene, Holocene, etc. In the
mid-1970s, some folks began feeling a need to create a new epoch, the
Anthropocene, an era when human activities generated substantial eco-impacts.
Science has not yet agreed on an official definition. Some say it started with the explosive
impacts of the Great Acceleration, which began in 1945. Others say the Industrial Revolution (~1780). Others say the Neolithic Revolution, the dawn
of agriculture and civilization, which began about 12,000 years ago.
Dan Flores
believes that it began much earlier, during the late Pleistocene, as humans
migrated out of Africa. When they
arrived in new regions for the first time, megafauna species were hit hard,
resulting in a series of extinctions. He
wrote, “The Pleistocene extinctions, in other words, look very much like the
first act of the Anthropocene, the beginnings of what we now call the Sixth
Extinction.”
These early ancestors were successful predators because they
benefitted from technological advantages including spears, slings, blades, warm
clothing, and fire. High-tech teams were
able to kill powerful prey. Their
high-tech advantages enabled humans to successfully colonize much of snow
country — despite the fact that their lean and nearly hairless bodies were
finetuned by evolution for tropical climates.
Close your eyes and imagine what northern Eurasia and the
Americas would look like today if they had never been colonized by hominins — a
vast, astonishing, Serengeti-like wild paradise of abundant life! Wow!
Wild, free, happy… and perfectly healthy and sustainable! Imagine that!
When our ancestors first wandered in, snow country was home
to a variety of huge animals that had enjoyed living there for a very, very
long time — grazers, browsers, predators, and so on. A number of these species were originally
from tropical regions of Africa and Asia, like the elephant, rhino, and
sabertooth families. Over time, these
tropical megafauna species gradually evolved traits that improved their ability
to survive in the cooler climate, like warm coats of thick fur.
Snow monkeys (Japanese macaques) are interesting
primates. Like our hominin ancestors,
they originated in tropical Africa several million years ago. Over time, their ancestors wandered off into
the outer world, and eventually migrated from Korea to Japan more than 300,000
years ago. Some now live in Japan’s
chilly regions, where snow might cover the ground for four months, in depths up
to 10 feet (3 m), and temperatures can plunge to -4°F (-20°C).
Snow monkeys adapted to snow country via a long slow process
of evolution. So now, when winter
approaches, their thin summer fur automatically grows and thickens into luxurious
warm coats. During the summer, they
build up body fat by feasting at the warm season buffet. In winter months, they survive on stored body
fat, and rough foods like leaves and bark.
They huddle together to keep warm.
They don’t use fire. They’ve
lived 300,000 years in Japan, and they’re still alive today because humans have
allowed them to continue existing.
Also around 300,000 years ago, Homo sapiens emerged in Africa. From there, we migrated out of the tropics,
and eventually colonized most of the world, including regions having temperate
or arctic climates. Instead of gradually
evolving beneficial adaptations like the snow monkeys did, our clever
technology boosted our ability to keep warm and survive in chilly places.
In modern cultures, a belief in human supremacy is the
norm. Our limitless brilliance is the
mother of infinite miracles. We’ll
easily fix climate change, save the world, colonize Mars, and enjoy endless
love, peace, and happiness! The notion
of Anthropocene has an aroma of human vanity.
We are the most powerful and important critters on Earth!
Welcome to the Pyrocene
The four primordial elements are earth, water, air, and
fire. Fire has existed on the planet for
more than 400 million years, long before the dinosaurs. It will continue burning long after the human
circus moves off the stage, as long as there is fuel, oxygen, and spark.
One mind-altering day, my brain crashed into the work of Stephen
Pyne, the
author of more than 30 books about fire, and one of the world’s foremost
experts on fire history. He described an
extremely crucial turning point in Big History: the domestication of fire. The earliest evidence of this has been found
in South Africa, inside Swartkrans Cave.
It dates to about two million years ago, long before the emergence of Homo sapiens. The two primary suspects are Homo erectus, or an
earlier australopithecine hominin. Did
we drive these predecessors off the stage?
Much later,
Homo sapiens inherited the knowledge of fire making, and this
ability eventually enabled us to become the dominant species on Earth, and the
planet thrashing demolition team of today.
Greek mythology includes the story of Prometheus, a sassy man
who stole fire from the god Zeus and gave it to humans. Stories say that he was the inventor of the
fire drill, the tool for kindling flame.
He boldly violated forbidden limits, and the gods severely punished
him. His theft initiated the dawn of
human misery.
As discussed earlier (see Mother Africa), the domestication
of fire began in the same general timeframe as a wave of megafauna extinctions
in Africa. Was this a coincidence? Peter Ungar noted, “…the sudden appearance of
large concentrations of artifacts and animal remains around two million years
ago surely signals a change in the role of hominins in their world.
Our ancestors had grabbed a place at the dinner table with
the large carnivores. Hominins were
eating antelopes, hippos, horses, giraffes, and elephants. Stone tools gave hominins better access to
meat and marrow.
Pyne thinks that the Anthropocene idea is too limited. It is rooted in the emergence of agriculture
and civilization. But the primary event
that made these changes possible was the domestication of fire. So, instead of the narrower time window of
the Anthropocene, he recommends the creation of a broader epoch called the Pyrocene (pyro means
fire). It would include the events of
the Anthropocene. The Pyrocene would
close the curtains on the ancient Ice Age, and usher in the new and turbulent
Fire Age.
Pyne described three categories of fire.
·
First fire is natural, sparked into flame by
lightning, volcanoes, etc. Its fuel is
wood and vegetation. This fire has
existed for 400 million years.
·
Second fire is anthropogenic, ignited by
hominins. It enabled agriculture,
civilization, early industry, soil destruction, deforestation, and the massive
expansion of human inhabited regions.
Its fuel is wood and vegetation.
· Third
fire ripped open the trap door to hell.
Growth of the industrial era eventually required far more fuel than
firewood could provide. The
heartbreaking mistake was to introduce the fire breathing monster to fossil
hydrocarbons (coal, oil, gas). Suddenly,
humankind had access to a million times more energy dense combustible
fuels. Shit! Trouble ahead!
Carbon Cycle
NOAA
calls carbon “the chemical backbone of life on Earth. Carbon compounds influence the Earth’s
temperature, make up the food that sustains us, and provide energy that fuels
the global economy.”
Carbon is an element that exists in the atmosphere, oceans,
living organisms, rocks, soils, sediments, fossil fuel reservoirs, etc. This is called the carbon pool. The pool is a magic act that allows the flow
of carbon throughout the ecosystem, which is vital to the survival of the
family of life. The pool includes both carbon sources and carbon sinks.
A carbon source emits more carbon than it absorbs. Major sources include the burning of coal,
oil, and gas, and the emissions from making concrete.
A carbon sink absorbs more carbon than it releases. For example, a forest is a carbon sink, and
it absorbs and stores carbon as it lives and grows. The two primary sinks in the global carbon
cycle are the land and the water.
The atmosphere is neither a source nor sink. It constantly absorbs carbon emissions, and
it’s constantly a source of carbon for plant life to absorb. In the atmosphere, carbon is allowed to pass
back and forth between sources and sinks — something like a train station, an
ongoing flow of in and out.
Prior to the industrial era, the carbon load in the
atmosphere was a relatively stable closed loop — the volume of incoming carbon
from sources was similar to the volume of outgoing carbon absorbed by sinks.
Today, that stable closed loop is long gone. When fossil energy is burned, CO2
is released into the atmosphere. From
there, the water sink absorbs some of it, and so does the land sink. Unfortunately, these two sinks cannot absorb CO2
as quickly as it’s now being emitted, so the growing surplus accumulates in the
atmosphere. Here
is a chart that displays the explosive growth of global CO2
emissions from 1900 to 2020. Note that
what the land and ocean sinks can’t absorb builds up in the atmosphere.
With the fantastically tragic mistake of industrialization,
humankind unleashed a planet roasting monster that is raging against the
vitality of life on Earth — a furious roaring bonfire of fossil carbon. This monster had been safely and harmlessly
sleeping underground for millions of years.
Unfortunately, some goofy smarty pants could not leave it alone, and all
hell broke loose. Big Mama Nature
screamed!
The normal and natural balancing act of atmospheric carbon
got slammed. In 1850, the atmosphere
contained 280 ppm of CO2 (parts per million). In 2024 it’s up to 426 ppm and growing. Consequently, the CO2 content of
the atmosphere is now higher than at any time in the last 3.6 million years,
and its volume is skyrocketing now. The
planet’s climate is going batshit crazy, and the worst is yet to come. Ooops!
Global
CO2 Emissions is a chart showing carbon emissions from 1800 to 2006. The four nations that emit the most carbon
are highlighted. Note the enormous surge
of carbon emissions since 1930!
As we burn fossil energy day after day, year after year,
faster and faster, enormous amounts of ancient carbon are released into the
atmosphere, where it constantly accumulates, clobbers climate stability, and
generates heat waves, droughts, catastrophic floods, monstrous storms, and huge
wildfires. Earth is getting hotter and
hotter. Thawing permafrost is releasing
huge amounts of methane. Glaciers are
shrinking, sea levels are rising, the family of life is getting brutally
bludgeoned. Circle what is wrong in this
picture.
If humankind suddenly went extinct next week, the permafrost
would continue thawing, releasing additional methane, trapping more heat, and
further boosting the temperature of the atmosphere and oceans. And every day we keep burning like
crazy. The pyromania genie cannot be put
back into the bottle. Sorry kids!
4 comments:
https://pixelmap.ca/CO2/
Yeah! another entry. Was worried about you.
It's probably the combination of fire, group cooperation, and tech ( spears, knives, etc...) but yes, fire. I guess we are reaching the crescendo, not sure if it was inevitable or not, but here we are.
So it goes.
Here's my nightmare. Kindling the first domestic fire by spinning a fire drill stick was not, in any way, an obvious thing for a wild African primate to do. The heartbreaking possibility is that just one individual ancestor (a kid?) discovered it purely by accident, and it consequently unleashed two million years of change and catastrophe, and created the global horror show outside your window. Whoops!
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