Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJulian Waters Modified over 8 years ago
1
September 15, 2011
2
Our species has been around about 60,000 years ◦ 0.000013% of Earth’s 4.6 billion year history Until about 12,000 years ago, we were hunter-gatherers Since then, 3 major cultural changes have occurred ◦ Agricultural Revolution ◦ Industrial Revolution ◦ Information/Globalization Revolution
3
These three revolutions have… ◦ Given us more energy and new technologies to alter/control more of the planet to meet our basic needs/wants ◦ Allowed expansion of human population, largely due to increased food supplies ◦ Increased environmental impact because of increased resource use, pollution, environmental degradation
4
Survived by collecting edible wild plant parts, hunting, fishing, scavenging meat Lived in small bands (fewer than 50) ◦ Worked together to get enough food to survive ◦ Populations grew slowly due to high infant mortality rates and average life span of 30-40
5
Mostly little environmental impacts More advanced hunter-gatherers… ◦ Used advanced fuels and fire to convert forests in to cultivated ◦ Contributed to extinction of some larger animals ◦ Altered the distribution of plants as they carried seeds/plants to new areas
6
Exploited environment to survive Environmental impact small and local… ◦ Small population sizes ◦ Low resource use per person ◦ Migration (allowed natural processes to repair damage they caused) ◦ Lack of technology
7
Began 10000-12000 years ago Move from nomadic hunting-gathering to settled agricultural communities ◦ Learned how to domesticate wild animals ◦ Learned how to grow various wild food plants
8
Practiced SLASH-AND-BURN CULTIVATION ◦ Clear small patches of forests by cutting down trees/vegetation ◦ Burn the underbrush ◦ Ashes help fertilize the often nutrient-poor soils Used SHIFTING CULTIVATION ◦ After you use a patch for several years, soil becomes depleted of nutrients ◦ Clear another plot of land and plant it ◦ Abandon previous patch for 10-30 years until soil becomes fertile again ◦ First form of sustainable cultivation
9
Early farmers had fairly little impact on environment because… ◦ Dependence mostly on human muscle power and crude tools ◦ Population size/density were low ◦ Enough land was available so they could practice shifting cultivation
10
CONSEQUENCES ◦ Using domesticated animals increased ability to expand agriculture and support more people ◦ Degraded/destroyed habitats of wild plants/animals Cut down vast forests to supply wood for fuel/building material Plowed large expanses of grassland Built irrigation systems Soil erosion, salt buildup in irrigated soils Overgrazing encouraged desertification Topsoil erosion
11
CONSEQUENCES ( cont. ) ◦ Increased production/use/accumulation material goods Growing volumes of waste and pollution ◦ Farmers could grow more than enough food for families ◦ Urbanization (formation of villages, towns, cities) Concentrated sewage/wastes, polluted air and water, increased spread of disease ◦ Increased conflict over land ownership and water rights ◦ Survival of plants and animals (once critical to humanity) became less important
12
Began in England in mid 1700s and spread to U.S. in 1800s Rapid expansion of production, trade and distribution of material goods Shift… ◦ From dependence on wood and flowing water ◦ To dependence on machines running on nonrenewable fossil fuels (coal and then oil and natural gas) Led to switch from small-scale, localized production of handmade goods to large-scale production of machine-made goods Fossil fuel-powered farm machinery, commercial fertilizers and new plant-breeding techniques increased crop yields
13
New technologies give us increasingly rapid access to much more information on a global scale ◦ Scientific knowledge doubles about every 12 years and general information doubles about every 2.5 years Positives ◦ Help us understand more about Earth ◦ Allow us to respond to environmental problems more effectively/rapidly ◦ Satellites allow surveying of resources, monitoring of changes on Earth ◦ Use computers to model and map environmental systems ◦ Reduce pollution/degradation by substituting data for materials/energy and communication for transport
14
Negatives ◦ Provide overload of info ◦ Cause confusion, distraction, sense of hopelessness as we try to identify useful environmental information ◦ Increase environmental degradation and decrease cultural diversity as globalized economy spreads over most of Earth and homogenizes world’s cultures
15
Download the article from Class Jump Read the article keeping track of major significant effects (i.e. societal) and environmental impacts. Write a reflection of these points, what the author is trying to convey, and your opinion of the article. Typed, 1-2 page Due next block
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.