Here’s an interesting CNN article on British data suggesting that the mass-extinction event that humans started about 50,000 years ago (which wiped out lots of large mammals, for instance) is continuing. Unsurprising, but it's neat to see actual data about current effects. Thanks to my mother for forwarding the link.
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Date: 2004-03-19 07:21 (UTC)totally works in with my studio project this semester :D
in a sorta tangental way.
n.
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Date: 2004-03-19 07:47 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-03-19 08:14 (UTC)(And the reason there are still so many in Africa is presumed to be that that's where humans evolved, so the land animals had a chance to evolve alongside them to avoid being slaughtered. By the time humans spread onto other continents, they were already good hunters, and the land animals there had no chance to adapt before they were extinct.)
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Date: 2004-03-19 09:42 (UTC)Don't blame it all on the humans, the article didn't.
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Date: 2004-03-19 09:55 (UTC)And humans have had a hand in climate change -- notably since the Industrial Revolution (which changed insolation levels by spreading soot around the world, for instance), but also for much longer through deforestation.
I posted this, by the way, not in a spirit of "Humans cause extinction! Let's wipe out all the icky humans!", but because it seemed like an interesting piece of science. Yes, it might have some political implications, too (if we make the planet a poorer habitat for ourselves, we might be in trouble), but that's not so much what I found interesting about it.
Out of curiosity, who am I talking to? (Just curious whether I know you or not.)