Climate Crisis, Biosphere & Societal Collapse
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Earth - A Global Map of Wind, Weather and Ocean Conditions - Use the menu at bottom left to toggle different views. For example, you can see where wildfires/smoke are by selecting "Chem - COsc" to see carbon monoxide (CO) surface concentration.
Climate Reanalyzer (University of Maine) - A source for daily updated average global air temps, sea surface temps, sea ice, weather and more.
National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center (US) - Information about ENSO and weather predictions.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) Global Temperature Rankings Outlook (US) - Tool that is updated each month, concurrent with the release of the monthly global climate report.
Canadian Wildland Fire Information System - Government of Canada
Surging Seas Risk Zone Map - For discovering which areas could be underwater soon.
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1 Quick synopsis (≈250 words)
The essay argues that large, semi‑permanent settlements long pre‑dated intensive farming, hierarchy, and monarchy. Drawing heavily on David Graeber and David Wengrow’s The Dawn of Everything, it presents sites such as Göbekli Tepe (c. 9600 BCE) and Çatalhöyük (c. 7100‑5950 BCE) as examples of egalitarian “cities” whose inhabitants were still mainly hunter‑gatherers who only “played” at farming. It then claims that forced migration into the Tigris–Euphrates marshes pushed people toward year‑round cereal agriculture, generating large surpluses that could be monopolised and guarded. This, the author says, accidentally produced grain‑based city‑states, hierarchy, and kingship. Once agriculture took hold, it allegedly triggered mass deforestation, soil erosion and desertification across the Middle East, a cycle later repeated worldwide. Modern fossil‑fuel civilisation is portrayed as the same dynamic on steroids: a one‑off bonanza of ancient sunlight that will soon end in climate‑driven collapse. The piece forecasts warming of ≈ 4 °C by the 2080s, an eventual 5–10 °C rise, a shutdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, and the long‑term relocation of humanity to an ice‑free Arctic rim empire after population crash. Underlying it all is a systems‑theory view: societies self‑organise to maximise energy throughput; unless radical change occurs, ecological limits will cap complexity and force contraction.
2 Critical analysis
Intellectual merits
Shortcomings & biases
3 Fact‑check summary
Bottom line
The essay is thought‑provoking but over‑states its archaeological and climatological case. Graeber and Wengrow’s thesis that urban‑scale congregation can precede full agrarian dependence is intriguing, yet the piece presents it as consensus when it is still hotly debated. Its environmental warnings are directionally sound—industrial civilisation is indeed energy‑hungry and ecologically costly—but the quantitative climate claims cherry‑pick the most extreme possibilities and compress timelines.
A more balanced narrative would:
Distinguish clearly between ritual aggregation sites, large villages, and true cities.
Acknowledge the co‑evolution of cultivation, herding and settlement rather than framing farming as a sudden fall from Eden.
Ground climate projections in probability‑weighted IPCC ranges rather than worst‑case straight‑line extrapolations.
Recognise the diversity of ancient agricultural regimes—some highly destructive, others relatively sustainable.
Until those nuances are incorporated, the piece remains a compelling eco‑anthropological manifesto, not a fully evidenced account.