{"id":24960,"date":"2016-03-01T12:00:50","date_gmt":"2016-03-01T01:00:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=24960"},"modified":"2016-03-01T12:07:45","modified_gmt":"2016-03-01T01:07:45","slug":"homo-sapiens-and-the-sixth-mass-extinction-of-species","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/homo-sapiens-and-the-sixth-mass-extinction-of-species\/","title":{"rendered":"Homo sapiens and the sixth mass extinction of species"},"content":{"rendered":"
While many of the attributes of the <\/span>genus<\/span><\/i> Homo are shared by other species, it\u2019s the use of fire which uniquely distinguishes <\/span>Homo<\/span><\/i> from other members of the animal kingdom. Evolved on the surface of a flammable carbon-rich biosphere exposed to an oxygen-rich atmosphere, the skill humans acquired in igniting fire and combustion has become their blueprint; it has affected the rest of nature. From nomad clans of hunter-gatherers to civilizations releasing copious amounts of energy and thus increasing entropy in nature at levels many times higher than the human physical capacity, <\/span>Homo sapiens<\/span><\/i> have become a dominant force in nature.<\/span><\/p>\n The oldest confident records of human-lit fire go back to about 1 million years (Ma) ago. \u00a0However, there\u2019s evidence of anthropogenic fires as early as ~1.8 Ma, about the time <\/span>H. ergaster and H. erectus<\/span><\/i> emerged as physically distinct from other human species such as <\/span>H. Habilis and H. Rudolfensis<\/span><\/i>, likely in part as the consequence of a new diet of cooked meat.<\/span><\/p>\n Living around camp fires for hundreds of thousands of years, the mesmerizing effect on the human mind of the life-like dance of the flames has likely inspired intelligence, reflection, curiosity, imagination and premonition and fear of death. That gave rise to cravings for immortality, omniscience and omnipotence, as manifested by burial and cremation and later by construction of tombs and monuments to enshrine the rulers for eternity.<\/span><\/p>\n Further to extensive burning by pre-historic humans and Neolithic farmers, which may have raised atmospheric greenhouse gas level by a small amount, the large-scale excavation and combustion of coal, oil and gas since the 18th century\u2014compounded by land clearing and release of carbon from soils, tropical and high latitude bogs and permafrost\u2014is leading to a shift in a long-term composition of the atmosphere-ocean system, with an<\/span> inherent rise in global temperature<\/span><\/a>. The rise within only a couple of centuries of atmospheric CO2 from ~280 to 403 parts per million (ppm) and consequent rise in global land-sea temperatures (Figures 1 and 2) is shifting the relatively stable Holocene climate into uncharted territory.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Figure 1.<\/b> Global land-ocean temperature index<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n