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17 08 07 - 14:25
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Book shows life on Earth without humans
By Jess Davis
Washington - The scenario the whole of humanity disappears one day, leaving worldly possessions, buildings and trash behind.
What happens next is the subject of a new book, "The World Without Us," by Alan Weisman, a journalism professor at the University of Arizona and a science writer.
It's an implausible situation, but gives a fresh take on the environmental challenges Earth faces because of human actions.
"If we theoretically wipe people off the earth, we have a much clearer vision of what's here without us," Weisman said in an interview.
Book shows life on Earth without humans
By Jess Davis
Washington - The scenario the whole of humanity disappears one day, leaving worldly possessions, buildings and trash behind.
What happens next is the subject of a new book, "The World Without Us," by Alan Weisman, a journalism professor at the University of Arizona and a science writer.
It's an implausible situation, but gives a fresh take on the environmental challenges Earth faces because of human actions.
"If we theoretically wipe people off the earth, we have a much clearer vision of what's here without us," Weisman said in an interview.
The book has been wildly popular since its July 10 release, reaching No. 6 on the New York Times bestseller list for hardcover nonfiction, and No. 25 on Amazon's top selling books.
In a sea of environment-focused books, Weisman's stands out - it doesn't lecture the reader, doesn't try to impose guilt about the damages the reader may have inflicted upon the world over the years but does paint a picture of hope that the earth will slowly but surely reclaim its lands and seas.
"It's not that most people haven't read about the environment, but it's overwhelming," Weisman said. "People find it too daunting to understand, too depressing, too scary."
Weisman said most environmental writing creates a sense of fear in readers that they will one day die because the earth can't sustain them.
"By posing a fantasy at the beginning of the book, with a slight plausibility, I let the reader assume the worst has already happened so you don't have to worry about it but we get to hang around and see what happens next."
His exploration of those changes is thorough and fascinating. Weisman leads the reader on a tour of the globe, touching every continent but Antarctica, and jumps in time from early man to present day to way, way in the future.
One chapter is devoted to a detailed, step-by-step process of how suburban neighborhoods could become forests and wildlife sanctuaries. A typical house, 50 years after humans' mysterious disappearances: the basement and pool are overrun by plants, the house is home to small animals, and pristine bathroom tile and stainless steel flatware peek out from a pile of rubbish and the collapsed roof.
In the book, Weisman describes how plants and animals seem to bounce back faster than humans in areas of the world that have already become unpopulated by humans. Birds appeared at the site of Chernobyl less than a year after it detonated, fields of poppies popped up on hillsides ravaged by fire in Cyprus and rice paddies returned to wetlands in Korea's demilitarized zone, where red crowned cranes now delicately sidestep land mines.
In his fantasy future, the absence of humans in New York will lead to the gradual collapse of skyscrapers. The Statue of Liberty could survive, albeit as an underwater, barnacle-covered relic. The subway system would flood soon after humans disappeared and within 20 years several Manhattan streets could turn into rivers.
Most world landmarks would fall to the ravages of time: the Great Wall of China will shift to become a Great Pile of Rocks, the Panama Canal will fill with silt and the Egyptian pyramids will continue to dissolve. But American presidents will stare out from the side of Mount Rushmore for more than 7 million years.
One of the few chapters in which it seems humanity has trumped nature is called "Polymers are Forever." Humans' plastic obsession is filling the oceans with plastic in every shape and form, and waves break it up into particles now small enough to be eaten by plankton, attacking the food chain from the bottom up.
"Plastic bags should be outlawed," Weisman said, talking about the book. "It should be illegal for grocery stores to give away bags." He also suggested a plastic tax to encourage conservation and said Americans just don't need to use as much plastic.
Though the book doesn't preach the rhetoric of reducing carbon footprints and buying hybrid cars, Weisman hopes readers will be shocked by some of the lasting touches they're leaving on the planet, and will change their behavior to curb the damage.
"I wrote this book so humans beings could look at the world without us in it and think, about how we can be in this world but in a much more balanced relationship with nature," Weisman said.
Source: Scripps Howard Foundation Wire
Used tags: earth_with_out_humans, environment, environmental_damage, gaia, pollution, return_to_the_earth
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Sunday 28 December 2008 at 6:27 pm
Los Angeles - A California liposuction doctor has lost his license to practice after being busted for using human fat he sucked out of patients bodies to fuel his car. As it turns out, using human medical waste in California is illegal.
Doctor Craig Bittner, who operated a fat clinic in Beverly Hills, California up until November when he was shut down for his morbid use of human body fat, was creating what he called "lipodiesel" out of the human waste collected from his clinic's liposuction practice.
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Sunday 28 December 2008 at 6:08 pm
Washington - In 1941, Henry Ford unveiled a plastic-bodied car whose panels included soybean meal as component. The feat made headlines--and history--but the idea never took off commercially. However, researchers continue to toy with the idea, including (ARS) scientists Lei Jong and Jeffrey Byars, who are testing soy flour as a "green" filler for tires and other natural rubber products.
Today's fillers are typically petroleum-based particles called "carbon black." Tire manufacturers use them in rubber to improve tensile strength and wear resistance. But petroleum's many competing uses, rising costs and ties to pollution have rekindled interest in biobased alternatives, especially those derived from homegrown crops like soybeans.
Soy flour is primarily used in cooking and baking. But Jong and Byars' studies at the ARS Cereal Products and Food Science Research Unit in Peoria, Ill., indicate the flour also could serve as an inexpensive alternative to today's carbon-black tire fillers.
The researchers use defatted soy flour that's been dispersed in water to form aggregates 10 microns in diameter (about 1/1000th of an inch). Then they add the aggregates to rubber latex and freeze-dry the mixture. This causes the aggregates to form a tight interconnecting network through the rubber.
For lab tests, the researchers mold the soy-based rubber into samples and subject them to shearing and other forces. Of particular interest is the "storage modulus," which measures the elasticity of a material. On average, the storage modulus scores of composites containing 30 percent soy flour are 20 times higher than filler-free rubber, but somewhat lower than those reinforced with carbon black.
In addition to testing other biobased filler materials, the researchers are collaborating with rubber manufacturers to further explore the technology.
A report on the research was recently published online in the Journal of Applied Polymer Science.
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Sunday 28 December 2008 at 6:01 pm
Reno - Scientists say the Arctic ice is melting at a faster pace than previously thought and now believe the Arctic Ocean could be completely ice-free by 2015.
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Friday 17 October 2008 at 2:55 pm
Toward a greener economy
By Moises Velasquez-Manoff
New York - Market bubbles occur when goods are traded at prices that greatly exceed real value. They burst when they grow so bloated that they become unstable. The current economic turmoil, widely viewed as the worst since 1929, is one example of what can happen when the difference between market value and actual value becomes too great.
Environmentally minded economists have long warned that equally burstable ecological bubbles can occur if humanity lives beyond earth's capacity to regenerate. The problem, they say, is that we're addicted to economic growth. Mainstream economics assumes that the economy, the engine of modern civilization, can grow perpetually.
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Sunday 12 October 2008 at 06:23 am
Renewable Electricity Surges by 32 percent-Provides 11 percent of U.S. Net Generation
Washington - According to the latest "Monthly Electricity Review" issued by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (October 3, 2008), net U.S. generation of electricity from renewable energy sources surged by 32 percent in June 2008 compared to June 2007.
Renewable energy (biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, wind) totaled 41,160,000 megawatt-hours (MWh) in June 2008 up from 31,242,000 MWh in June 2007. Renewables accounted for 11.0 percent of net U.S. electricity generation in June 2008 compared to 8.6 percent in June 2007.
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Sunday 12 October 2008 at 06:15 am
City Trash Plus Farm Leftovers May Yield Clean Energy
Washington - Tomorrow's household garbage might be blended with after-harvest leftovers from fields, orchards, and vineyards to make ethanol and other kinds of bioenergy. Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists are investigating this straightforward, eco-friendly strategy in their laboratories at the agency's Western Regional Research Center in Albany, Calif.
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Monday 29 September 2008 at 02:52 am
Big Help in Biofuels Research
Washington - A short little grass known as purple false brome may speed discoveries about switchgrass, its famous cousin and energy-crop hopeful.
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists like John Vogel and Yong Gu at the agency's Western Regional Research Center in Albany, Calif., are probing the genetic makeup of purple false brome, or Brachypodium distachyon, as a faster way to learn more about the genes inside switchgrass.
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Monday 29 September 2008 at 02:43 am
By Mark Clayton
For almost as long as people have worried about global warming, economists have called for taxing carbon emissions. As long as sending CO2 skyward was cost-free, they argued, the practice would continue.
Starting Sept. 25, for the first time in US history, a price tag will begin to be placed on millions of tons of carbon dioxide spewing from every major power plant from Maine to Maryland.
Just what that price will be won't be known until after Thursday's computerized auction of about 12.5 million tons of "carbon allowances," essentially permission slips to pollute.
Utility companies will bid on the allowances. They may be used, saved, or traded so that any company with a need to send more CO2 up the stack can buy more - at the market price. The amount of CO2 to be cut over the next decade is modest - about 18 million tons annually (US power plants collectively emit about 2.8 billion tons of CO2 yearly). But the auction and process of setting a price for carbon are critical first steps, many say.
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Saturday 13 September 2008 at 5:18 pm
Dispelling The “Twisted Truths” Of Energy-Saving Light Bulbs
For more than 129 years, people have used the incandescent light bulb as the primary light source for the home. With more consumers searching for products that are good for the environment, a new light bulb is revolutionizing lighting around the world. Energy-saving compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) have become the symbol of the “green” movement. They use 75 percent less energy and last as much as 10 times longer than traditional incandescent light bulbs. Plus, they help reduce carbon dioxide emissions linked to global warming.
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Saturday 13 September 2008 at 5:08 pm
Campaign Plants Trees At Schools Across The U.S.
Schools are generally seen as the place to plant the seeds of knowledge. Yet thanks to a one-day environmental campaign, schools and parks across the country became places to plant something a little greener.
Sixteen schools across the country, from Long Island to Hawaii, participated in the initial “Trees for Success” campaign, with more than 800 trees planted in schools and neighboring parks in a single day. The schools were selected by the Arbor Day Foundation out of more than 200 applications based on need, civic and local support, student involvement, a plan for upkeep, and location.
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