Title: Technological Progress
1Societal Evolution,
Climate Change
and
Dr Benny Peiser Liverpool John Moores University,
UK
2Key Issues
- Growing apocalyptic fears about imminent climate
catastrophes - Contemporary anxiety often based on the belief of
global climate disasters in ancient and
prehistoric times. - Societal evolution and climate change during the
Holocene - Hyper-complex civilisations and the growing
technological capability to cope with climate
change.
3The New Apocalyptic Age
- Growing fear of imminent global catastrophe - and
belief in global salvation as a result of the
triumph of good over evil. - Modern apocalypticism biggest economic and
political threat to the survival of free and open
societies in the 21st century - Religious apocalypticism
- Political apocalypticism
- Environmental apocalypticism
4- "We are risking the ability of the human race to
survive." - --Rajendra Pachauri, Chairman of the IPCC,
The Independent,
23 Jan 2005
5Some say the world will end in fire
6Some say in ice --Robert Frost
7The Tipping Point is nigh!
- Many scientists are now warning that we are
moving closer to several "tipping points" that
could -- within as little as 10 years -- make it
impossible for us to avoid irretrievable damage
to the planet's habitability for human
civilization. - --Al Gore, 18 September 2006
- We have a window of only 10-15 years to
take the steps we need to avoid crossing
catastrophic tipping points. - --Jan Peter Balkenende Tony Blair,
20 October 2006
8No empirical foundation for imminent tipping
points
- Since our knowledge of the real world
climate system variability and change remains
limited, we do not know if human activity moves
us closer or further from any tipping points. - --Roger Pielke Sr., March 2006
- Throughout history, prophets of doom have
set dates for imminent global calamity only to
be disproved and discredited. Tipping point
prophets risk the same ignominy within the next
10-15 years.
9Apocalyptic fury and intoleranceAttacks on
heresy and scepticism
- Episodes of apocalyptic fervour and hysteria have
often led to witch-hunts, civil wars and social
upheaval. - Heresy and scepticism are dangerous a perceived
menace to true believers. - For almost 2000 years, the apocalyptic paradigm
(i.e. predictions of global catastrophe) was
aggressively enforced as the unanimous
consensus in much of Europe. - Edmond Halley, accused of anti-apocalyptic
heresy, presented a paper to the Royal Society in
1691 on The necessity of the world's coming to
an end, - to prove that I am not guilty of
asserting the eternity of the world".
Janet Horne, Last witch burned in Scotland 1727
10Societal evolution and climate change during the
Holocene
The Holocenes relatively stable climate
climatic fluctuations during the last 10,000
years similar to variations experienced during
Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period
episodes that even agrarian societies were able
to cope with.
Climate changes in central Greenland over the
last 17,000 years, at 100 years intervals.
Reconstructions of temperature (black line) and
snow accumulation rate (white line). Main climate
events are highlighted 1) Little Ice Age 2)
Medieval Warm Period 3) Iron Age Cold Epoch 4)
8k2 episode 5) Younger Dryas. Adapted from
(Committee on abrupt climate change 2002).
11Holocene Climate Fluctuations
12(No Transcript)
13End of the Little Ice Age and onset of Modern
Warm Period
14The rise of complex societies adaptation to
climate change
- Emergence of complex societies in the 6th and 5th
Millennia BC linked to deteriorating
environmental conditions in parts of the world. - Emergence of some complex societies coincided
with or followed a period of increased aridity
(8 kyr BP) but chronology highly contentious - Episodes of accelerated aridification 6 kyr BP
- --Brooks, Quaternary International, 2006
15Climate change and the rise of riverine
civilisations
Riverine civilisations were not only
extraordinarily fertile - but also
extraordinarily famine-prone.
16Marginal Environments Location of abandoned
settlements and failed ancient societies
Marginal, self-reliant agricultural societies are
extremely vulnerable to environmental change
17Revival of Environmental Determinism
- Climatic changes implicated in the collapse of
many past civilizations. - Belief that the observed cultural transitions can
be causally related to the magnitude of climatic
change. - Assumption of causality in most of these cases
highly questionable. - Numerous instances where cultures survived rapid
environmental change unscathed - --Coombes and Barber (2005)
-
18Revival of Environmental Determinism
- Many associations may be purely coincidental.
- others collapsed without any environmental
forcing - If causality is to be demonstrated, one must show
that environmental change was the critical factor
in the cultures collapse. - These conditions not given due to poor data and
chronological constraints - --Coombes and Barber (2005)
19Paleo-climatic downturns(based on ambiguous
proxy data)
- Younger Dryas, ice-age-related cooling in parts
of northern hemisphere - 8200 BP cooling event
- 5200 BP cooling event
- 4400 BP cooling event linked to collapse of
Akkadian, Egyptian, Indus Valley and Yankze River
civilisations - 2200 BP cooling event, linked to collapse of
Mediterranean Bronze Age civilisations - 536 AD cooling event, linked to the fall of
Roman Empire - Cooling events have been largely detrimental to
societies. - Warm periods - considerably benign for social,
economic and technological progress.
20An alleged climate disaster in ancient Britain
- Claim Climatic downturn at the Bronze Age/Iron
Age transition (850 BC) resulted in settlement
abandonment in parts of Britain and the whole of
Europe - Recent research shows no evidence for wholesale
land-use change at this time the overall picture
is one of continuity of land use or even
increased agricultural activity.
--Petra
Dark, Journal of Archaeological Science, 2006
21How reliable are paleo-climatic proxy data?
- Very little confidence can be assigned to
statements concerning the hemispheric mean or
global mean surface temperature prior to about
A.D. 900 because of sparse data coverage and
because the uncertainties associated with proxy
data and the methods used to analyze and combine
them are larger than during more recent time
periods. - --Surface Temperature Reconstructions for
the Last 2,000 Years, National Research Council,
2006
22Temporary breakdowns and recovery
- A number of complex societies fell apart during
the last 4000 years. Many temporary breakdowns
are never unmitigated or total. - Most unsuccessful ancient societies recovered
after a period of marked decline and regularly
emerged more robust and dynamic. - General trend of cultural evolution during the
last 10,000 years has been technological
progress, increased social complexity and
improved protection against forces of nature.
23Fruits of the Industrial Revolution Global life
expectancy today
24The rise of hyper-complex, high-tech
civilisations
Desalination plant in Jedda
Desalination plant in Ashkalon
Greening the desert
Future energy
25Hyper-complex, high-tech civilisations
- Hyper-complex societies are able to withstand
prolonged droughts thanks to technological
advances and economic resilience. - Todays high-technology global civilisation is
much better sheltered from possible catastrophes
due to international monitoring and mitigation
technologies and support systems.
26Hyper-complex societies more resilient than ever
- Our ancestors have survived 5 million years of
recurring onslaughts from ice ages,
mega-droughts, cosmic impact disasters, plagues
and epidemics. - Technological and societal evolution has now
reached a level of complexity that renders the
probability of human survival for the next 1,000
years drastically higher than at any previous
stage of our long history. - There is no reason to believe that we wont be
able to cope with climate change.