Volcanic Warming Eyed in 'Great Dying' 353
gollum123 writes "AP writes on an article in the journal Science where an ancient version of global warming may have been to blame for the greatest mass extinction in Earth's history. 'In an event known as the "Great Dying," some 250 million years ago, 90 percent of all marine life and nearly three-quarters of land-based plants and animals went extinct. Researchers think the answer is Massive volcanic flows in what is now Siberia, and believe the extinctions were caused by global warming and oxygen deprivation over long periods of time."
I knew it... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I knew it... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I knew it... (Score:2)
He already has.
And like the story, when he returns people are doing strange things with the English language, the scary guy has just been elected, and nobody knows history was changed!
16% oxygen? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:4, Insightful)
It might not kill people who are trained to deal with the differences in the levels. For the elderly, for those that have weakened immune systems, and for young children these changes might have consequences.
People train at altitude for months to get their bodies prepared for thin air. I have a feeling that dinosaurs might not have had the chance (or possibly even the evolutionary ability) to make those changes over a short period of time.
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
As I said they might have lacked the ability to adapt to the changes over that time frame.
Humans could deal with 10% (Score:5, Interesting)
The rest of the ecosystem would probably not be so flexible.
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2, Informative)
It was a triple-witching hour for extictions.
Time of widespread regression of the seas.
Gymnosperms (seed plants) replaced many spore bearing plants.
Widespread accumulation of evaporites. More of Permian salt deposits than of any other age
Waters were hypersaline
Mass extinction at the end of t
That's not really an evolutionary ability is it? (Score:2)
Re:That's not really an evolutionary ability is it (Score:2)
Wrong mass extinction, not the dinosaurs (Score:2)
This is the Great Dying, about 250 million years ago. The dinosaurs died out about 65 million years ago.
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
But that isn't extinction.
People train at altitude for months to get their bodies prepared for thin air. I have a feeling that dinosaurs might not have had the chance (or possibly even the evolutionary ability) to make those changes over a short period of time.
Sherpas [wikipedia.org] LIVE at crazy altitudes, and
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:3, Informative)
"Some of us have been toying with the idea that dinosaurs evolved to be a low-oxygen adaptation," resulting from this era, Ward said. "We know birds can live at much lower oxygen concentrations than we do, and we and think there were similar lung adaptations in dinosaurs."
Yeah, birds can live at lower oxygen levels because they fly at altitude on a regular basis. They also come down to the ground for various reasons. Th
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
In fact, I thought the opposite of what they're proposing here is another theory. Essentially, there wasn't much oxygen around until there was significant plant life, which then led to a gradual increase in oxygen, which led to a mass extinction. (If you're adapted to handle a certain atmospher,
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:3, Informative)
It's not about cross-training, it's about how respiratory systems work. And since birds came out of Dinosaurs, it's likely that thier respiratory system is more like birds than Mammals are since Mammals split off before the Dinosaurs evolved and for that matter, the Reptiles crawling around right now evolved before the evolution of dinosaurs are pretty much stayed where
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:3, Informative)
It's the equivalent of teaching newtonian gravity at high school so that later you can learn einsteinian gravity at university, and then demolish the whole thing in your PhD thesis.
the fringes of the atmosphere are thinner in oxygen than the lower reaches. of course for practical purposes (Everest/Chomolungma) there's less difference in percentage than higher up, and pressure is the overriding factor.
OK, OK, I'm Anal Retentive. sue me.
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
The other thing to remember is that tweaking the partial pressure of oxygen effects how well oxygen is absorb
Re:16% oxygen? (Score:2)
They're talking about the die-off before the Dinosaurs, not after.
Could "a biology person" just hold her breath? (Score:2)
If you want a sense of how a change like this could radically change favored adaptations, think about grazing mammals that evolved to take advantage of grasses. As grasses became more prevalent, animals who could eat grass well exploded in population. Big niches got to be dominated by some pretty mundane-seeming adaptations to the digestive process. Seems like a subtle edge, doesn't it?
Reading the article, the folks making th
Teh (Score:5, Insightful)
WTF are we supposed to learn from this, "Don't set the fucking volcanos off"?
If only the US had signed the Krakatoa-Pompeii Treaty, we wouldn't be getting fucked to death by these massive volcanic flows!!
+ 2 Funny, + 3 Insightful (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Teh (Score:4, Interesting)
According to this, most of those who lived through this process either lived in the arctic areas, and could adapt by moving towards the equator, or spent part of their life hibernating or encysted...and could do so out of season when necessary.
I've never seen this complex proven, but it would certainly explain why both the meteor impact people and the volcano people keep coming up with good arguments.
All this time (Score:5, Funny)
And all this time I thought it was nine-tenths of all marine life, and 75% of land-based life that went extinct.
More like the "Great Baking" (Score:4, Funny)
Mmmm baked vegetable and meat medley.
The sad part is that we'll be part of the main course....I'll have Geek au gratin please with a side of elephant home fries.
Re:More like the "Great Baking" (Score:2)
*= or just because they'd watched too many caddyshack movies in a row.
Yesterday we had the great freeze... (Score:5, Interesting)
This bit o' work by Robert Frost seems appropriate now:
Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I've tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice
Slashdot...News for Nerds. Stuff about death.
Re:Yesterday we had the great freeze... (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday we had the great freeze... (Score:2)
Frankly, if the big day comes in my lifetime, I just hope for enough time to relax and enjoy a good beer while I heckle the morans trying to evacuate the city by car.
Beer? Yeah, that would be good, but I would rather die with a beer in my hand and my wife's mouth... you get the idea ;-)
Ok, I RTFM... (Score:5, Interesting)
Studying a 1,000-foot thick section of exposed sediment, Ward's team found evidence of a gradual extinction over about 10 million years followed by a sharp increase in extinction rate that lasted another 5 million years.
Huh?
A Gradual extinction over 10 million years? Yeah, That's gradual all right.
The best part is the "sharp" increase over five million more years. So what he's saying is that a hell of lot of stuff died over 15 million years? Wowfuck.
If we've got 10 to 15 million years of fossil fuel to burn, I say screw it.
"Dear? you can turn up the heat now"
feh.
Re:Ok, I RTFM... (Score:5, Insightful)
30 miles/hour is fast or slow depending on what sort of transportation you are talking about (walking vs. car vs. jet plane). 10 million is sharp vs 1100 million.
Re:Ok, I RTFM... (Score:2)
Actually a number of scientists are arguing for two short pulses of extinction seperated by approximately 10 million years, with the second one being especially severe. So that would be consistent with Ward's time frame though not with his view of it being one extended event.
Re:Ok, I RTFM... (Score:2)
It doesn't mean it took 10 million years for one species to become extinct. I means over a 10 million year period, species were become extinct, as you go through the time period, less and less are left. Then for 5 million years the numbers of species surviving drops quickly.
Unless some very drastic happens (humans hunt it to extinction), most species die out over time.
I have no idea what you mean by "we've got 10 to 15 million years of fossil fuel to burn". This is sediment, not fuel. We don't have near
Vulcanism (Score:5, Informative)
Except that the earth is only about 4000 years old and fossils were put there to test our faith, right?
* I nearly typed 'vulvanism', but that's a different story.
Re:Vulcanism (Score:2)
dinosaurs with cars (Score:2, Funny)
It certainly couldn't have been caused by nature...
high C02 not bad if slow (Score:2)
Damn them! (Score:2)
Is there nothing Sarbanes-Oxley cannot taint? Now even Ph must move moved to cater to the whims of this capricious law.
Lesson for the end of the day... (Score:2)
Discuss.
scientists change their minds every fiftee minutes (Score:2)
Actually I am just being cynical. Some fields are finally showing convergence, such as cosmology where the evidence is starting to agree with each other. I suggest a lot of this "newest, greatest theory B.S." is publicity mongering by institutions trying get more grants.
Re:scientists change their minds every fiftee minu (Score:2)
Remember how the new "Ice Age" was comming? That was brought to us by the same group of hippies screaming about "global warming"
Until we get the political agendas out of mass media "Science", I ain't buying it
Re:scientists change their minds every fiftee minu (Score:2)
Re:scientists change their minds every fiftee minu (Score:2)
Which is going to kill us first - The Ice age or Global warming? - Would they cancel each other out?
Should we all do our part to save mother earth by going out right now and buying Humvees to stave off the next ice age?
Sounds like Yellowstone (Score:5, Informative)
To summarise, Nebraska is well known for its ash deposits - mined for cleaning products like Ajax - but no-one knew where it all came from.
Then in 1971, Mike Voorhies found a mass grave of prehistoric bones - sabre-toothed deer, zebra-like horses etc. - all killed by something big 12 million years ago. They were all buried under volcanic ash up to 3 metres deep.
One problem - no-one knew where all the ash came from.
Now Yellowstone was known to be pretty active, with its geysers, boiling mud-pools etc. but they couldn't find a caldera, ie. an actual volcano cone anywhere in the park.
But fortunately NASA were testing some high altitude photography techniques and decided to take some pictures of Yellowstone, thoughtfully dropping some copies off at the Visitor Centre. It was then that they realised that in fact Yellowstone is ONE BIG CALDERA - i.e. a 'superplume', 9000 square kilometres of crater left from some humungous explosion a long time back.
In Bill Bryson's words, "imagine a pile of TNT about the size of an English county and reaching 13 kilometres into the sky, to about the height of the highest cirrus clouds, and you have some idea of what visitors to Yellowstone are shuffling about on top of".
He goes on, "The Yellowstone eruption of two million years ago put out enough ash to bury New York State to a depth of 20 metres ..."
And then there's the last supervolcano eruption in Toba, in northern Sumatra, 74,000 years ago. Studies of ice cores in Greenland show that at least 6 years of 'volcanic winter' followed, and that humans probably were at the brink of extinction, with maybe only several thousand of us at any one time for thousands of years after (which maybe explains our relative lack of genetic diversity).
Yes, volcanoes are more than fire and magma - every now and then there're some *really* big ones.
Re:Sounds like Yellowstone (Score:4, Interesting)
Tim Cahill discusses this in his short book Lost in My Own Backyard : A Walk in Yellowstone National Park [amazon.com] (which is a great book, BTW). The Yellowstone caldera is believed to be 30+ miles wide. It has exploded several times, and in more recent times has been erupting about once every 600K years. The fact that the last explosion was 640K years ago can lead to some sobering thoughts.
Some claim that the next eruption is overdue, a fact that the USGS disputes [usgs.gov].
Flow v. Floe (Score:2)
I'm a graduate student, forgive me for this triviata.
Re:Flow v. Floe (Score:2)
Linq [peacelink.de]
Re:Flow v. Floe (Score:4, Informative)
According to Chambers Dictionary, floe is probably from the Norwegian flo, meaning layer. The Old Norse is flO. The O character should really be a lower-case 'o' with an overbar, or a long-o, but that's not easy to represent here.
Flow is a noun in Scottish, meaning a morasse, a flat moist tract of land, a quicksand, a moorland pool, a sea basin or sound. This one is from a slightly different Old Norse root, though rather similar to the previous. The Old Norse is flOa, meaning to flood, with Icelandic flOi, a marshy moor, and Norwegian dialect floe, a pool in a swamp.
In Old English, the verb to flow, as appears in your example, was flOwan. I believe that the connection with this and the Scottish noun is through the Old Norse verb.
Paul
Change in oxygen levels (Score:5, Interesting)
In the Carboniferous, what you see (in addition to extra nasty forest fires) is an explosion of gigantism among diffusion limited organisms. Such organisms, mostly insects and amphibans, have respiratory or circulatory systems that are limited by the ability of oxygen to diffuse through them. With higher O2 levels, such animals can develop larger body plans and clearly did in the Carboniferous. By contrast, falling O2 levels would probably be an evolutionary pressure towards dwarfism and smaller body plans.
After the Permian mass extinctions, we do see very few large animals. This might be associated with low O2 levels, but it might also be the results of an ecosystem so disrupted that it can't support large predators.
However, it would be hard to hang the extinctions on oxygen alone since oxygen levels seem to have fallened over a much longer period of time than the extinctions, and would not have affected all organisms equally. Perhaps coupled with volcanism and global warming it is enough, but personally I doubt it. I am inclined to favor models that talk about volcanism or other causes leading to stratification and toxicity in the oceans. If you are going to kill >90% of all oceanic species, it would seem that the best bet is to make the oceans unlivable for them.
However, this debate is likely to continue for a long time and we will no doubt hear many other theories before it is all done.
Here's my theory... (Score:2)
The few ancient astronaut advocates of the "open-source secure spacing initiative" were thought to have been killed as well, but what really happened was that they left the Earth, and colonized Titan (hence the
Re:Here's my theory... (Score:2)
The "great dying" was caused by the meltdown of the core reactors of the ships that brought the ancient astronauts to the Earth.
You are close, but it was no accident. God sabotaged the reactor with a bobby pin because she was mad at the astronauts for eating pork rinds (and Bill Gates paid her a bonus to do it).
life imitates spaceballs (Score:2)
Getting ridiculous (Score:3, Insightful)
I do not disagree that the planet may be getting warmer, but labeling an ancient volcano as killing off most life as global warming is just sensationalistic. The crap that is getting put out as "science" when it comes to global warming is starting to push the fringe of being reasonable. Didn't some guy say that we should all stop eating meat so we cull most of the cows so their methane gasses would no longer contribute to greenhouse gasses?
This place is getting nuts, and I haven't found any Vogon ships recently.
Re:Getting ridiculous (Score:4, Informative)
Let's see...
1. Relevance to 'modern' global warming: none. This is a hypothesis to explain one of the biggest extinctions in the history of the planet. Whatever caused it, afterwards the planet was almost a complete desert.
2. The siberian volcano wasn't merely 'big'. It was the size of Europe! One of the biggest volcanoes to happen since life evolved on Earth. And it lasted a very long time: erupting pretty much constantly for a million years. Krakatoa wasn't even a damp fart in comparison, and it changed the climate for years. It's called a flood basalt eruption, and they are really rare.
3. We know something happened to the oxygen levels at that time. They've never recovered: before the extinction, oxygen levels were nearly double what we have now. Afterwards, oxygen levels were as low as they are now at the top of high mountains. Modern animals, including us, would have serious problems in that environment. Imagine what problems animals used to even more oxygen would have. Yep, they'd die.
4. The dinosaurs. Yes. Well. Guess which event preceded the dinosaurs? You don't suppose, perchance, that the reason the world was warmer when the dinosaurs were about was because of this? I mean, saying the dinosaurs were happy in a hotter climate, so it doesn't matter if it's hot is just dumb. The hot climate that the dinos lived in was what killed the creatures that came before. That made space for dinosaurs to appear.
Or to put it another way. Polar bears are perfectly happy when the temperature is -20 or lower. So naturally, everything else would be happy if the entire world was at this temperature. Yeah, right. (And of course, polar bears would be just fine living at the equator. The dinosaurs had it hotter! SHEEEESH)
5. The main cause of the fall in oxygen levels was supposedly a massive drop in sea levels. The most likely cause of this is supposedly global cooling caused by the volcanoes ash (there are very large carbon deposits under the sea, which would have become liberated when the sea levels dropped enough). This is what caused the global warming.
Finally, this is not sensationalistic. This huge extinction HAPPENED. The siberian volcano also happened, at the same time. The reduction in oxygen levels happened, too. A lot of other stuff happened at this time. There's very good evidence for all of this. The question the paper is trying to answer is what caused the extinction. This has bugger-all to do with global warming in a modern context, cows or even vogons.
This [bris.ac.uk] link describes the vulcanism in Siberia a bit better than the rather lame Yahoo article linked by the blurb.
Then why did the plants die? (Score:2)
From the article:
Plants do photosynthesis, consuming carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Why would a decline in oxygen levels kill them?
And something else: we humans have adapted to thin-air conditions quite easily. People live in Nepal and Tibet, and it did not even take evolution. Ordinary flatlanders can move to Tibet, too, and after a couple of weeks they have adapted to the thinner air. We are mammals, with big brains and a high m
Global warming without Haliburton? Without OIL? (Score:2)
There must've been some other "evil multinationals" back then. May be, those dinosaurs had a more advanced civilization, than thought?
Who was it? (Score:2)
I trusted him!
Oh wait... he's not a scientist. He's not even what most would consider a "smart" individual. He's just another stupid US president.
"Noah was here." (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Money and Power (Score:5, Informative)
We're talking about the Permian Extinction - which, by the way, no-one actually calls the "Great Dying".
I could tell y'all about it but it would be a duplication of effort. Do yourself a favor and read something:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/darwin/exfiles/per
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian_extinction [wikipedia.org]
[OT] Your .sig (Score:3, Insightful)
> Luck favors the bold. - Virgil
> Luck favors the well prepared. - Pasteur
Luck favors the lucky.
Re:Money and Power (Score:2, Funny)
Well, you know there are other countries at least ?
Re:Money and Power (Score:2)
Factories?
Us?
We're an anarcho syndicalist collective [mac.com]. No factories here. Or shrubberies either.
More like a surfeit of facts (Score:4, Interesting)
I suggest you read the papers here [cspo.org] and here [cspo.org] before continuing. Actually, I suggest that EVERYONE ON SLASHDOT read those papers; they will open your eyes.
Revenge (Score:2)
As for the small-minded ones, the aching in their brains is payback.
Re:Money and Power (Score:2)
Let me see if I get the rules streight here.
1. If you somehow conflict with the currently accepted evolutionary theory in favor you are "Flame Bait" in moderation.
2. If you happen to notice the economic motivations of the theory generation and support mechanisms you are "Flame Bait" No matter how obvious they are!
3. If you even joke about the political bias of any theory you are "Flame Bait."
4. Finally if you dare suggest that there might be anything Americans are doing right even in a humorous way you
Re:Money and Power (Score:3, Insightful)
No, if impugn the work of scientists simply because it would fit your political agenda, and give no counter evidence to support your conspiracy theories, then yes, it is flame bait.
Re:ancient global warming (Score:2, Insightful)
In either way, assuming you are a supporter of the latter theory you should also know that global warming can have several different reasons.
The global warming that has happened since the widespread introduction of the car and petroleum products in the energy industry, as well as industrialised cattle farming, is real, in a
No Evidence ; ) (Score:2, Insightful)
I filtered through gollum123's article submission to find any political bias .. he's clean. Although I still believe that global warming is a big problem that we must do something about,. I cannot deny that nature itself is as big a problem:
All we can do is work on the stuff we can control. We cant control earthquakes, tsunamis from those, hurricanes etc.. we need to keep focussing on prediction and reducing emmisions. If we get taken ou
Re:ancient global warming (Score:3, Interesting)
Global warming definitely happens naturally. That doesn't mean the current global warming is natural, or entirely natural, or that we can do nothing to stop it.
The consensus of scientific opinion seems to be moving more and more towards the current warming happening much faster than historical ones, and mankind being partially responsible.
Problem is, by the time we wait for conclusive evidence, it may be too late.
Re:ancient global warming (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"mini" Ice Age (Score:2)
Not that the article has the slightest thing to do with your comment.
Re:"mini" Ice Age (Score:2)
Newsweek April 28, 1975: The Cooling World (Score:5, Informative)
The evidence in support of these predictions has now begun to accumulate so massively that meteorologists are hard-pressed to keep up with it. In England, farmers have seen their growing season decline by about two weeks since 1950, with a resultant overall loss in grain production estimated at up to 100,000 tons annually. During the same time, the average temperature around the equator has risen by a fraction of a degree - a fraction that in some areas can mean drought and desolation. Last April, in the most devastating outbreak of tornadoes ever recorded, 148 twisters killed more than 300 people and caused half a billion dollars' worth of damage in 13 U.S. states.
To scientists, these seemingly disparate incidents represent the advance signs of fundamental changes in the world's weather. Meteorologists disagree about the cause and extent of the trend, as well as over its specific impact on local weather conditions. But they are almost unanimous in the view that the trend will reduce agricultural productivity for the rest of the century. If the climatic change is as profound as some of the pessimists fear, the resulting famines could be catastrophic. "A major climatic change would force economic and social adjustments on a worldwide scale," warns a recent report by the National Academy of Sciences, "because the global patterns of food production and population that have evolved are implicitly dependent on the climate of the present century."
A survey completed last year by Dr. Murray Mitchell of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reveals a drop of half a degree in average ground temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere between 1945 and 1968. According to George Kukla of Columbia University, satellite photos indicated a sudden, large increase in Northern Hemisphere snow cover in the winter of 1971-72. And a study released last month by two NOAA scientists notes that the amount of sunshine reaching the ground in the continental U.S. diminished by 1.3% between 1964 and 1972.
To the layman, the relatively small changes in temperature and sunshine can be highly misleading. Reid Bryson of the University of Wisconsin points out that the Earth's average temperature during the great Ice Ages was only about seven degrees lower than during its warmest eras - and that the present decline has taken the planet about a sixth of the way toward the Ice Age average. Others regard the cooling as a reversion to the "little ice age" conditions that brought bitter winters to much of Europe and northern America between 1600 and 1900 - years when the Thames used to freeze so solidly that Londoners roasted oxen on the ice and when iceboats sailed the Hudson River almost as far south as New York City.
Just what causes the onset of major and minor ice ages remains a mystery. "Our knowledge of the mechanisms of climatic change is at least as fragmentary as our data," concedes the National Academy of Sciences report. "Not only are the basic scientific questions largely unanswered, but in many cases we do not yet know enough to pose the key questions."
Meteorologists think that they can forecast the short-term results of the return to the norm of the last century. They begin by noting the slight drop in overall temperature that produces large numbers of pressure centers in the upper atmosphere. These break up the smooth flow of west
Re:"mini" Ice Age (Score:2, Insightful)
The majority of Scientists believe that human behavior 'contributes' to the already naturally occuring phenomenon of Global Warming. Humans are not the root cause, humans simply assist the process in speeding up, even slightly.
One thing most all of those scientists agree on is that Global Warming is happening. That shouldn't be part of the argument anymore.
The only thing that should be argued, tested, made into theories is what we, as humans, can do to slow or ot
Exactly (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Proves once again (Score:3, Insightful)
We've only been recording and passing down history for about 6,000 years. There may have been some damn mighty civilizations before then, but all knowledge of them is lost. (No Atlantis comments from the peanut gallery, it was a made up country Plato concocted for use in one of his books, and if he'd suspected people would have taken it seriously, he probably would have killed himself in despair)
We've already managed to drive a number of species to extincti
Re:Proves once again (Score:2)
I uh, think we would have figured that one out.
Christ we've found fossils of *flesh* from x million years ago, you think we couldn't find evidence of buildings from a society developed enough to pollute itself out of existence?
It's a wonderful idea, but no.
Re:Proves once again (Score:2)
We have a hard enough time finding buildings made 2000 years ago. Structure tend to look awfully rock-like after a only few centuries of neglect and erosion. Metal corrodes into oxides, wood rots, and even the hardiest plastic is eventually broken down by bacteria or
Re:Proves once again (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Proves once again (Score:2)
A quick note, I don't actually believe that another sentient species evolved on Earth at some point in the past, at least not one that left behind anything. If there were sentient dinosaurs, their lack of an opposable thumb kept them from building anything.
And yes, I'm making cracks about sentient dinosaurs in a tongue in cheek manner.
Cancer? (Score:2)
On the other side, the main reason I have heard about cancer is that we are finally living long enough where cancer is actually getting to enough of the population to bother us. 100 years ago not enough people lived long enough to get cancer muh less for anyone to pay attention to it.
Re:Proves once again (Score:3, Funny)
That sounds like a challenge!
Now, where did I hide the plans for my doomsday device...
Re:Methane =/ CO2. (Score:2)
A B.S. in something makes you qualified to "know" something?
What about all the Masters, Doctorates and Post-Doctorates that disagree with you?
Re:Methane =/ CO2. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:They had SUVs too?!? (Score:4, Insightful)
Now it's bad enough when we get local pertebations in weather that screw up the growing season. With global warming we start wandering into realms where the entire WORLD's growing patterns change. When you have millions of people starving in one country, while a previously uninhabited place starts being able to grow food like crazy, you get global wars as we all pile onto the new places like toddlers fighting over a cookie.
And if that weren't bad enough, where you have millions of starving people with compromised immune systems, epidemics aren't far behind.
Contrary view (Score:2)
Just to play devils advocate - have we not greatly widened the growing conditions that can be tolerated for many crops by now?
Between genetic engineering, and technological abilities like crop warmers (don't think that's exactly the right term, but basically a way of warming croplands so they can yield in the
Re:They had SUVs too?!? (Score:2)
Re:woot (Score:2)
Re:woot (Score:2)
Re:woot (Score:2)
Yeah, and it just so happens that no one noticed all those volcanoes erupting? Because cataclismic events are so subtle? Whoever modded that "insightfull" needs to have his moderation privileges permanently removed.
And BTW, the fact that there can be natural causes leading to global warming does not mean in any way that humanity shouldn't act resposibly. That would be like saying "I could be hit by a meteorite, so I don't need to stay sober before I drive".
If global wa
Re:last time and next time (Score:2)
/rant. (Score:2)
Re:Idiots (Score:2)
I believe in global warming, all I have to do is litterally step outside to see it and feel it.
Still, I'd suspect that this is less a man made thing than it is some sort of natural change that happen
Re:Full Story (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot needs a moderation choice "-1: Huge block of unformatted text".
Re:Environmentalaity (Score:2)
So very true.
So lets spend money researching how the environment works before we go yelling how it ends.
Alarmist scenarios about the end of the world from envirnmental disasters are a good way to get financial support for scientific research in the workings of the environment. And it doesn't hurt to look at the worse case scenarios either.
Re:Uhm (Score:2)