Interesting CNN article on mass extinctions

Mar 19, 2004 09:19

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.

links, politics, science, news

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nex0s March 19 2004, 07:21:33 UTC
neat! thank you!

totally works in with my studio project this semester :D

in a sorta tangental way.

n.

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plymouth March 19 2004, 07:47:09 UTC
hmm. interesting. so if it started 50,000 years ago then it's not really all about our technology and our pollution and returning to a 'simpler way of life' is unlikely to do more than slow the process - it won't reverse it. We really are, like Agent Smith said, a disease!

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beowabbit March 19 2004, 08:14:29 UTC
Yeah, the extinction of the large land animals was due to overhunting.

(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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anonymous March 19 2004, 09:42:43 UTC
He said the data supports the idea that the rise of humans over the tens of thousands of years along with climate changes are bringing on an extinction of many species and reshaping the natural world in ways that aren't thoroughly understood.

Don't blame it all on the humans, the article didn't.

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beowabbit March 19 2004, 09:55:14 UTC
What I know about the extinction of large land animals isn't from the linked article. That part of it is pretty clearly due to human hunting. Not unequivocally so, but archaeologists find that in lots and lots of places around the world, large land animals start declining upon the arrival of humans, and there is evidence of human hunting of those animals. (Of course, dates in this sort of thing are not uncontroversial ( ... )

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