Human evolution may be responsible for climate change

Are we the problem?
Youn gain some, you lose some
Approved by the Royal Society
100,000 years in the making
The big fish eats the little fish
The same thing that helped us...
...is also hurting us
Problem-solving skills and resource-based problems
We know how to find a solution
The timing could be off
Race against the clock
We can do it...right?
Not an optimistic overview
Life in the Anthropocene
Irreversible damage
A radical change is necessary
Are we the problem?

Climate change is one of the biggest challenges that humanity is currently facing. However, what if the way we consume and make use of nature is a trait ingrained in us?

Youn gain some, you lose some

A new study by the University of Maine led by associate professor Tim Waring asks if the same conditions that allowed evolution could also become an obstacle in fighting climate change.

Approved by the Royal Society

The study, titled “Characteristic processes of human evolution caused the Anthropocene and may obstruct its global solutions”, was published by the Royal Society’s Philosophical Transaction, the world’s oldest scientific journal.

100,000 years in the making

The researchers followed the impact humanity had on the planet over the last 100,000 years and its use of available resources.

Image: krysamon / Unsplash

The big fish eats the little fish

According to Waring and his team, long-term human evolution has favored people that belonged to bigger groups that also exploited the biggest number of resources.

The same thing that helped us...

These traits, developed for thousands of years, helped our ancestors survive, organize themselves, and form the earliest societies.

...is also hurting us

However, the traits that helped up to establish the human civilization may be the very same that is harming (and could possibly kill) our planet.

Problem-solving skills and resource-based problems

According to EuroNews, the authors of the paper figured out that problem-solving skills are connected to using more resources and to a greater scale, whenever is necessary.

We know how to find a solution

Warring and his team concluded that human beings always managed to come out on top in the face of life-threatening crises. However, not all is good news.

Image: jasongoodman_youxventures / Unsplash

The timing could be off

The study also claimed that human beings were overall better at figuring out solutions once problems had reached a critical moment.

Race against the clock

This might be bad news if we’re dealing with a race against the clock to save our planet from climate change.

We can do it...right?

“People currently feel that climate change is something that we will eventually solve”, University of Maine associate professor Tim Waring told EuroNews. “Because humans almost haven't come across a problem that we haven't been able to solve yet”.

Not an optimistic overview

However, Waring isn’t as optimistic: “I do want to add hope for humanity, but the point of this paper is not to be artificially positive, it's to accurately describe the challenge that we face”.

Life in the Anthropocene

Scientists agree we live in the Anthropocene, that is, the permanent and irreversible impression humans have left on Earth define the current age of our planet.

Irreversible damage

According to the United Nations, the human effect on the climate will become irreversible by 2030, probably the most dire example of the Anthropocene at work.

A radical change is necessary

What is true is that if humanity wants to do something to deal with climate change, a radical change is necessary. And it’s better to take action sooner rather than later.

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