The Aral Sea, before and after:
The cause? River in-flow to the inland sea diverted by the Soviets for irrigation.
The US Dust Bowl
The cause? Drought + inappropriate farming practices. Ploughing destroyed the prairie grasses needed to hold the top soil down. One Black Blizzard [pictured above], blew all the way east and covered the Statue of Liberty.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch
One of five areas in the Earth’s oceans where plastic rubbish collects due to the action of ocean currents.
The cause? Our rubbish, flowing into rivers and from there into the ocean. Our fishing nets, lost or dumped overboard.
Chernobyl
Radiation causes mutation in plants, animals and humans. Wild animals around Chernobyl are still radioactive because they eat radioactive plants.
The cause? Our nuclear power plant[s]. Other notable nuclear accidents include Three Mile Island [US] and Fukushima [Japan].
France – The Red Zone
The Red Zone is a no-go zone that was created by ordnance and chemicals left behind by 2 world wars.
The cause? A war that happened more than 100 years ago.
Maralinga in South Australia
A few words for this one:
‘The plutonium contamination at Maralinga was caused by these minor trials, two of which involved burning plutonium and detonating fissile material using conventional high explosives.
As a result just over 22 kilograms of plutonium-239 was dispersed around the site.
Plutonium-239 has a radioactive half-life of more than 24,000 years. This dangerous carcinogen is hazardous to humans if inhaled, ingested or absorbed through breaks in the skin.’
Two clean-ups were necessary.
‘Between 1996 and 2000, all but around 120 square kilometres of around 3200 square kilometres of Maralinga country had been cleaned to a standard considered safe for unrestricted access.’
‘In the worst-contaminated areas, 350,000 cubic metres of soil and debris were removed from an area of more than 2 square kilometres, and buried in trenches. Eleven debris pits were also treated with in-situ vitrification*. Most of the site (approximately 3,200 square kilometres) is now safe for unrestricted access and approximately 120 square kilometres is considered safe for access but not permanent occupancy.’
*In-situ vitrification is a process that melts things, including soil, into something similar to glass. Apparently it’s good for radioactive waste.
The cause? British testing of atomic weapons on Australian soil.
https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/maralinga
These are not the only examples of man-made damage, but they are the ones that resonate with me. I’m sure people can think of, or find, many other examples.
We may not have been capable of changing the planet 300 years ago, but we are now. In fact, if you include nuclear weapons, we have the capacity to destroy all life on the planet, many times over.
Meeks
p.s.Β And as a small aside to Aussies only – let’s not forget the Cane Toad, the foxes, the rabbits, goats, pigs, horses, waterbuffalo and camels.
January 30th, 2019 at 5:00 pm
Oh. Dear. Let’s add Sicily to the list. Foreign Correspondent, the ABC (yea for the ABC!) had a programme last night that investigated the horrible effects of detonating bombs in the firing range on the island. The birth defects in animals and humans have been appalling. What will our world be like? sigh
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January 30th, 2019 at 8:06 pm
Ugh. Thanks Anne. I hadn’t heard of that one. Sometimes I think the world is ruled by smiling psychopaths. π¦
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January 30th, 2019 at 8:38 pm
Only sometimes, Andrea?
Great and meaningful post. Thanks. And sending a hug.
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January 30th, 2019 at 11:43 pm
lol – okay, okay! It’s just that /sometimes/ the odd good ‘un does show up, like the PM of New Zealand. She seems to be a genuine person. Fingers crossed she’ll stay that way.
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January 31st, 2019 at 12:34 am
yes, she’s dreamy.*
Gives hope to us all.
*Or so she appears from a distance π
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January 31st, 2019 at 1:35 pm
Yeah, you can never truly tell what a person is like in private, but she does give us hope, and that’s a big thing. Politics has become such a dirty game. Or perhaps it always was but we never noticed? They hid it better?
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January 31st, 2019 at 7:36 pm
I think social media makes it easier to spot. Going to send you a tweet about one of our lovelies.
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January 31st, 2019 at 10:01 pm
Ut oh! I’d better log on then. π
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January 31st, 2019 at 10:04 pm
π
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January 31st, 2019 at 10:18 pm
Loved it. Thank you. -hugs-
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January 31st, 2019 at 10:28 pm
π
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January 30th, 2019 at 8:40 am
And still they argue … and still they deny … π¦
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January 30th, 2019 at 9:27 am
You know, I can sort of understand ordinary people who fear change and want to bury their heads in the sand. It’s comforting.
But what of the people heading up the fossil fuel industry?
I can’t believe they don’t know, or don’t believe the science. I believe they do know, and don’t care.
They’re the ones I’d like to gather up and exile to Tuvalu or some other place about to disappear thanks to climate change.
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January 31st, 2019 at 4:34 am
I hear Enceladus is nice this time of year. π
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January 31st, 2019 at 1:20 pm
Hah! That’s brilliant. I had to look it up. Saturn’s moon is absolutely perfect. π
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January 30th, 2019 at 8:06 am
So depressing, Andrea. Ugh. Humans.
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January 30th, 2019 at 9:29 am
Yeah. Where on earth did we come from? Da Vinci & Beethoven vs Exon Mobile & Monsanto et al. π¦
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January 30th, 2019 at 5:38 am
Pictures worth thousands and thousands of words!
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January 30th, 2019 at 9:29 am
-hugs-
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January 30th, 2019 at 2:18 am
Hello Meeka. Your post is a damnable indictment of the human race. Hugs
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January 30th, 2019 at 9:51 am
Thanks, Scottie. I wanted to show things that are clearly and /directly/ caused by us to make the point of what we can do, how much damage we can cause. If people still insist that global warming can’t be caused by humans…they’ll never be convinced.
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January 30th, 2019 at 12:08 am
So sad. Makes me angry – and also very worried for my kids and grandkids.
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January 30th, 2019 at 9:54 am
Me too, Yvonne. We [in the West] had it so good for so long. What will our kids and grandkids have to look forward to?
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January 29th, 2019 at 7:33 pm
The human capacity for stupidity does seem infinite, unfortunately.
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January 29th, 2019 at 8:23 pm
Yup. π¦
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January 29th, 2019 at 6:18 pm
Attenborough apparently called humans the scourge of the planet. Too true. I’ve seen the First World War detritus problem first-hand; aside from the poison there’s also ordinance. When I was visiting the Ypres battlefields, I was told that to this very day, three or four people a year are wounded or even killed from ploughing up un-detonated and very unstable shells. At other times, part-shells and debris is located and piled up for disposal. The Belgian government can’t get either the German or British governments to pay for the clean-up. And as you point out, this sort of thing is just a tiny part of the mess humanity has made of the planet and environment.
Apropos cane toads – I have a very distinct memory of being somewhere out in the Queensland desert, near Emerald about three decades ago, and watching a local warn us about cane toads, which were absolutely everywhere. ‘Don’t poke them here,’ he explained, while poking one near the back of the neck. Mind you, New Zealand’s got everything from opossums to rats, none of which evolved here, and all of which have been doing a number on our indigenous bird species. There’s a drive to render the place exotic predator free by 2050 or thereabouts, but I doubt it’s technically possible.
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January 29th, 2019 at 8:28 pm
Yeah, the Red Zone totally floored me, and of course, there are unexploded mines destroying the lives of children [and adults] in all conflict zones so the whole thing is ongoing.
The cane toads seem like such a small thing in comparison to Chernobyl or the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, but…even when we have good intentions, we mess things up big time.
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January 30th, 2019 at 4:24 am
The Red Zone and places like it are why I’m all about Hero Rats: https://www.apopo.org/en Rats are able to sniff out buried ordinance without triggering it. We CAN clean up our messes and refrain from making new ones. Whether or not we WILL–or will in time, is another matter….
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January 30th, 2019 at 9:42 am
Oh wow…they’re amazing! Thank you so much for the link, Marian. I’d never heard of HeroRats before. And they can detect landmines AND tuberculosis. Incredible.
Sadly, I don’t think we have the will. It’s easier to pretend we haven’t made a mess than to clean it up. π¦
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January 29th, 2019 at 5:09 pm
I sometimes wonder if those crack-brained notions about humans coming to earth from some other planet might be true. Maybe Homo sapiens (aka Homo destructor) was fleeing the last planet it trashed and ended up here. Job 1 was getting rid of the Neanderthals and other hominins. Tired brain thoughts…
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January 29th, 2019 at 8:31 pm
-giggles- actually I think they interbred with a lot of those Neanderthals, but the rest could make a lot of sense. I’m actually glad we don’t [yet] have the capacity to colonise other planets…
Hmm…perhaps we were exiled here on purpose?
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January 30th, 2019 at 5:03 am
You may be right! That idea is worth exploring in fiction. In fact, I’ll bet it’s been done. And yes, I’ve heard we have a tiny percentage of Neanderthal DNA. But there are no more Neanderthals around, or Denisovans, or any other species. Just us.
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January 30th, 2019 at 9:34 am
It would be nice to think we just assimilated everybody else, but we both know that has a snowflake’s hope in hell of being true. Homo Sapiens is the apex predator.
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January 29th, 2019 at 5:02 pm
Very very very upsetting. But thank you. The simplicity of this post speaks volumes, and I’m with you β€
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January 29th, 2019 at 8:32 pm
-hugs-
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January 29th, 2019 at 3:02 pm
I’m truly sorry for what the British did in/to Australia and I’m horrified by just what man is capable of doing to our planet and to the people on it. Russia should be releasing some water so that the Aral Sea can start to grow again and we should be organising for dredgers to start collecting all the massed garbage from all the places it mounts up and finding a better way of disposing of it properly. Manufacturers should be finding new non-damaging to the environment packaging and Governments should be enforcing the use of it. Hopefully, we’ve stopped damaging the planet in some ways and because of Global Warming will start trying to repair much of the damage we’ve caused.I regret that we shan’t be leaving the world the same place that my generation found it and my grandchildren may suffer because of that.
Hugs
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January 29th, 2019 at 3:46 pm
I hate to say this but the Australian government of the time was more than happy for the British to test nuclear weapons here. Everything else I totally agree with. Making any change for the better requires facing up to what we’ve already done. Pretending it never happened, or that ‘we’ can’t possibly damage the whole planet is ostrich behaviour at its worst.
I think a lot of people cling to the status quo because they’re afraid that any change will make things worse, for them personally.
Sadly, this status quo could well end up killing us all.
-hugs-
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