Tag Archives: Ancient

The Social Science Explaining Why More Climate Science Hasn’t Led to Greenhouse Action

A discussion of why more climate science hasn’t led to more greenhouse action. Link: The Social Science Explaining Why More Climate Science Hasn’t Led to Greenhouse Action Related Articles Why More Climate Science Hasn’t Led to More Climate Policy – Yet U.N. Climate Panel Endorses Ceiling on Global Emissions A Budget Distress Call – ‘Please Pay Us’ – Hidden in a Federal Weather Forecast

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The Social Science Explaining Why More Climate Science Hasn’t Led to Greenhouse Action

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Campaigning Again, for Obama to Say ‘No’

More than 150 former aides from President Obama’s campaign are pushing him to reject Keystone XL, a proposed oil pipeline they consider a threat to the environment. Continue reading here: Campaigning Again, for Obama to Say ‘No’ Related Articles Russia Accuses Greenpeace Activists of Piracy Jellyfish Invasion Paralyzes Swedish Reactor In BP Trial, the Amount of Oil Lost Is at Issue

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Campaigning Again, for Obama to Say ‘No’

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Early Agriculture Nearly Tanked Ancient Europe’s Population

A recreation of an ancient English farm. Photo: Gordontour

The rise of agriculture changed the world. And we don’t just mean the human world. At its onset, long before the Green Revolution paved the way for vastly improved yields, people were notoriously bad at using the land. To produce our food we used to cut down a staggering number of trees. Deforestation in the western world, driven by land clearing for farming, actually peaked hundreds or thousands of years ago. And, without things like fertilizer or irrigation, or the massive intertwined agricultural system we have today, local shocks—a fire, a drought, a flood—could cut vital food supplies for years.

So, while the rise of agriculture allowed human populations to blossom, it also opened the door for catastrophic collapses. Science News:

Researchers already knew that agriculture in Europe appeared in modern-day Turkey around 8,500 years ago, spreading to France by about 7,800 years ago and then to Britain, Ireland and Northern Europe approximately 6,000 years ago. Farming led to more plentiful, stable food supplies, fueling population growth. But little is known about long-term population trends among ancient European cultivators.

New research looking at the sizes of human populations in ancient Europe found that while agriculture helped populations grow, the burgeoning civilizations were not sustainable.

In most sections of Europe, populations at some point declined by as much as 30 to 60 percent compared with peaks achieved after farming began, Shennan’s team concludes. That population plummet is similar to the continental devastation wreaked by the Black Death, an epidemic that peaked in Europe between 1348 and 1350.

The scientists, says BBC History, are fairly certain that ancient climate change was not the cause of the collapses. The research is a nice reminder that any technology that lets you outpace your natural limits can also send you crashing back down when it fails.

More from Smithsonian.com:

Are We Headed for Another Dust Bowl?

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Early Agriculture Nearly Tanked Ancient Europe’s Population

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Jellyfish Invasion Paralyzes Swedish Reactor

Reflecting a global problem, a cluster of moon jellyfish clogged the cooling water intake pipes of the world’s largest boiling-water nuclear reactor, in southeastern Sweden, forcing its shutdown. Read the article: Jellyfish Invasion Paralyzes Swedish Reactor Related Articles BP Trial in 2nd Phase, to Set Amount of Oil Spilled In BP Trial, the Amount of Oil Lost Is at Issue Dot Earth Blog: Climate Panel’s Fifth Report Clarifies Humanity’s Choices

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Jellyfish Invasion Paralyzes Swedish Reactor

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A Disease Cuts Corn Yields

Goss’s wilt, a disease that is spreading in the United States, has been devastating the crops of corn farmers, while the cause of the tidal wave remains uncertain. See more here:   A Disease Cuts Corn Yields ; ;Related ArticlesObservatory: Cuckoo Finches Come Up With a New ConDot Earth Blog: Why More Climate Science Hasn’t Led to More Climate Policy – YetBP Trial in 2nd Phase, to Set Amount of Oil Spilled ;

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A Disease Cuts Corn Yields

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Dot Earth Blog: Climate Panel’s Fifth Report Clarifies Humanity’s Choices

The pace of global warming beyond 2050 is ours to choose, a new climate report says. Link to article:   Dot Earth Blog: Climate Panel’s Fifth Report Clarifies Humanity’s Choices ; ;Related ArticlesU.N. Climate Panel Endorses Ceiling on Global EmissionsClimate Panel’s Fifth Report Clarifies Humanity’s ChoicesDot Earth Blog: Why More Climate Science Hasn’t Led to More Climate Policy – Yet ;

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Dot Earth Blog: Climate Panel’s Fifth Report Clarifies Humanity’s Choices

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The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight: Revised and Updated: The Fate of the World and What We Can Do Before It’s Too Late

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