I’m reading Light of the Stars “Alien Worlds and the Fate of the Earth” — Adam Frank.
I’m about halfway through and so far Frank has supplied mostly background in his attempt, I’m assuming, to present various models — based on our solar system’s mechanics and planetary variations — to determine the probability of exo-civilizations, in the galaxy and the cosmos in general.
Humanity’s existence and technological capability is dependent on a host of serendipitous “coin-flips” all landing up heads. Two of the biggest and most impactful are plate tectonics and the availability of a billion years worth of stored solar energy in the form of fossil fuel.
Plate tectonics ensures that CO2 is recycled. (CO2 is fixed from the atmosphere as sediment and rock, calcium carbonate — limestone, taken below the crust, disassociated and then re-released by volcanoes around the planet.) Without this cycle, CO2 would stay fixed, the planet would cool (as it has done in the past) (Nitrogen and Oxygen, 78% and 21%, are not efficient greenhouse gases) and that would be it for Earth.
And we all know what fossil fuels have done for humanity; taken an energy starved species and give it unlimited access to millions of years of nearly-free solar power. Without fossil fuels, humanity would have killed off all the whales (for fuel), burned down all the forests (for fuel), and never seen the explosive population growth that produced copious ideas resulting in constant technological advancement.
Part of his premise (I’m guessing) is to determine the impact and potential mitigation of global warming during the Anthropocene. This unusual release of extra CO2 that is warming the planet is, as far as he’s concerned, a potential solution to the Fermi Paradox: exo-civilizations might kill themselves off by their shear size and impact on their planet.
As I read Adam Frank’s setup I thought about a strange “ready for fiction” story line:
What would happen if a volcano suddenly spawned beneath one (or more) vast crude oil fields? Imagine if a Kilauea sized volcano burst up from the sands of Saudi Arabia. The heat and fire would start the oil burning. Thirty mile-high plumes of smoke would spread out for decades. Nuclear winter would descend. This is much like what a super-volcano would do, but a smaller volcano would suffice to trigger the calamity.
This is typical, don’t you think, this reading of anything and the extrapolation of a fiction story from the material? The “what if”s. I thrive on them.
I promise you, truth is stranger – Here’s a little scientific study full of the human element and the petroleum industry
https://journalistsresource.org/studies/society/public-health/fracking-sexually-transmitted-infections?utm_source=JR-email&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=JR-email%22%20target=%22_self%22
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Sounds like a Freakonomics article. Fuck Fracking! No, no, no, Frack Fucking.
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What if science was a giant crock and everything we need to live at one with the planet like Dolphins was right in front of us and we missed it being “scientists?” Beyond that thought, I have a friend who sends me the most outside news stuff he can find because I threatened to put him in charge of a Mexican sex resort in a novel I was working on starring only people I knew and their various divorces and vocations. Truth is stranger than fiction. On that note, the last thing he sent me was a woman in Indiana who gave her hubby an OD heroin injection and couldn’t wait, so she smothered him with a pillow on his way out. That was AFTER she’d killed her boyfriend and served him at a neighborhood barbeque. After a trail of maybe seven other dead boyfriends and husbands scattered around. Stephen King and the myriad other vampire and zombie guys and gals got nothing on reality. The neighborhood Fourth of July cookout in the park? I just cancelled.
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