How long will human impacts last? - David Biello

808,750 views ・ 2017-12-04

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
Imagine aliens land on the planet a million years from now
0
6928
3812
00:10
and look into the geologic record.
1
10740
2839
00:13
What will these curious searchers find of us?
2
13579
3660
00:17
They will find what geologists, scientists, and other experts
3
17239
3901
00:21
are increasingly calling the Anthropocene,
4
21140
3029
00:24
or new age of mankind.
5
24169
2978
00:27
The impacts that we humans make have become so pervasive,
6
27147
4021
00:31
profound,
7
31168
973
00:32
and permanent
8
32141
1337
00:33
that some geologists argue we merit our own epoch.
9
33478
5360
00:38
That would be a new unit in the geologic time scale
10
38838
3181
00:42
that stretches back more than 4.5 billion years,
11
42019
4602
00:46
or ever since the Earth took shape.
12
46621
3079
00:49
Modern humans may be on par with the glaciers behind various ice ages
13
49700
5051
00:54
or the asteroid that doomed most of the dinosaurs.
14
54751
4569
00:59
What is an epoch?
15
59320
2079
01:01
Most simply, it's a unit of geologic time.
16
61399
2743
01:04
There's the Pleistocene,
17
64142
1584
01:05
an icy epoch that saw the evolution of modern humans.
18
65726
4055
01:09
Or there's the Eocene, more than 34 million years ago,
19
69781
3899
01:13
a hothouse time during which
20
73680
2063
01:15
the continents drifted into their present configuration.
21
75743
3788
01:19
Changes in climate or fossils found in the rock record
22
79531
3440
01:22
help distinguish these epochs and help geologists tell deep time.
23
82971
5710
01:28
So what will be the record of modern people's impact on the planet?
24
88681
4382
01:33
It doesn't rely on the things that may seem most obvious to us today,
25
93063
4538
01:37
like sprawling cities.
26
97601
1850
01:39
Even New York or Shanghai may prove hard to find
27
99451
3362
01:42
buried in the rocks a million years from now.
28
102813
3180
01:45
But humans have put new things into the world
29
105993
2598
01:48
that never existed on Earth before,
30
108591
2463
01:51
like plutonium
31
111054
1259
01:52
and plastics.
32
112313
1962
01:54
In fact, the geologists known as stratigraphers
33
114275
2977
01:57
who determine the geologic timescale,
34
117252
2342
01:59
have proposed a start date for the Anthropocene around 1950.
35
119594
5270
02:04
That's when people started blowing up nuclear bombs all around the world
36
124864
4168
02:09
and scattering novel elements to the winds.
37
129032
3471
02:12
Those elements will last in the rock record,
38
132503
2510
02:15
even in our bones and teeth for millions of years.
39
135013
3461
02:18
And in just 50 years, we've made enough plastic,
40
138474
3420
02:21
at least 8 billion metric tons,
41
141894
2580
02:24
to cover the whole world in a thin film.
42
144474
3842
02:28
People's farming, fishing, and forestry will also show up as a before and after
43
148316
5688
02:34
in any such strata
44
154004
1910
02:35
because it's those kinds of activities
45
155914
1870
02:37
that are causing unique species of plants and animals to die out.
46
157784
5541
02:43
This die-off started perhaps more than 40,000 years ago
47
163325
3942
02:47
as humanity spread out of Africa
48
167267
2609
02:49
and reached places like Australia,
49
169876
2595
02:52
kicking off the disappearance of big, likable, and edible animals.
50
172471
5554
02:58
This is true of Europe and Asia, think woolly mammoth,
51
178025
3940
03:01
as well as North and South America, too.
52
181965
2770
03:04
For a species that has only roamed
53
184735
1566
03:06
the planet for a few hundred thousand years,
54
186301
2535
03:08
Homo sapiens has had a big impact on the future fossil record.
55
188836
4884
03:13
That also means that even if people were to disappear tomorrow,
56
193720
3980
03:17
evolution would be driven by our choices to date.
57
197700
4078
03:21
We're making a new homogenous world of certain favored plants and animals,
58
201778
5548
03:27
like corn and rats.
59
207326
2131
03:29
But it's a world that's not as resilient as the one it replaces.
60
209457
3579
03:33
As the fossil record shows,
61
213036
1982
03:35
it's a diversity of plants and animals
62
215018
2408
03:37
that allows unique pairings of flora and fauna
63
217426
3131
03:40
to respond to environmental challenges, and even thrive after an apocalypse.
64
220557
5860
03:46
That goes for people, too.
65
226417
1940
03:48
If the microscopic plants of the ocean suffer
66
228357
2741
03:51
as a result of too much carbon dioxide, say,
67
231098
2890
03:53
we'll lose the source of as much as half of the oxygen we need to breathe.
68
233988
5859
03:59
Then there's the smudge in future rocks.
69
239847
4241
04:04
People's penchant for burning coal, oil, and natural gas
70
244088
3755
04:07
has spread tiny bits of soot all over the planet.
71
247843
4214
04:12
That smudge corresponds with a meteoric rise
72
252057
3382
04:15
in the amount of carbon dioxide in the air,
73
255439
3151
04:18
now beyond 400 parts per million,
74
258590
3091
04:21
or higher than any other Homo sapiens has ever breathed.
75
261681
4619
04:26
Similar soot can still be found in ancient rocks
76
266300
3220
04:29
from volcanic fires of 66 million years ago,
77
269520
4480
04:34
a record of the cataclysm touched off by an asteroid
78
274000
3169
04:37
at the end of the late Cretaceous epoch.
79
277169
3262
04:40
So odds are our soot will still be here 66 million years from now,
80
280431
4860
04:45
easy enough to find for any aliens who care to look.
81
285291
4460
04:49
Of course, there's an important difference between us and an asteroid.
82
289751
4401
04:54
A space rock has no choice but to follow gravity.
83
294152
3217
04:57
We can choose to do differently.
84
297369
2531
04:59
And if we do, there might still be some kind of human civilization thousands
85
299900
4743
05:04
or even millions of years from now.
86
304643
2488
05:07
Not a bad record to hope for.
87
307131
2670
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7