Erle C. Ellis

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Erle C. Ellis



Average rating: 3.91 · 329 ratings · 46 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Anthropocene: A Very Short ...

3.94 avg rating — 298 ratings — published 2018 — 5 editions
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El Antropoceno: Una breve i...

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Antropocene - Esiste un fut...

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Anthropozän: Das Zeitalter ...

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L’Anthropocène

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“In 1989, journalist Bill McKibben published The End of Nature, the first popular book about climate change. For McKibben, human destruction of natural environments had reached its pinnacle. Modern societies had already altered, domesticated, and controlled the world more than any before, polluting and degrading water, soil, air—and the nature of life itself. By altering the climate system, humans had taken the final step. Nature untouched by humans had now disappeared through the global reach of a human-altered climate.”
Erle C. Ellis, Anthropocene: A Very Short Introduction

“Major shifts in Earth’s climate are the norm, not the exception, in the Quaternary, which includes dozens of glacial to interglacial transitions. Earth was also significantly warmer during the Eemian, the last interglacial interval before the Holocene, which ended about 115,000 years ago. The relatively stable and moderate interglacial temperatures of the Holocene therefore stand out as an island of climate stability within a sea of extremes. If Earth’s climate system were to leave this relatively stable state, there is every reason to believe that the consequences might be catastrophic both to human societies and to non-human life as we know it. No industrial or even agricultural society has ever experienced climate shifts like those common before the Holocene. And greenhouse gas emissions and climate change are far from the only Earth system alterations that have accelerated since the 1950s.”
Erle C. Ellis, Anthropocene: A Very Short Introduction

“For scientists in general, the evidence that humans are causing potentially catastrophic changes to Earth’s functioning as a system is rich, multifaceted, detailed, and robust—the product of decades of research. There is no need for an Anthropocene epoch to understand or recognize these changes. Indeed, a growing number of Earth scientists, including Stan Finney, are increasingly concerned that the push to recognize an Anthropocene epoch might even be diverting scientific efforts away from more important goals, like better understanding and addressing the specific challenges of global climate change or mass extinction. In the words of geologist James Scourse, ‘while the anthropocenists rearrange the deck chairs, other scientists are getting on with the business of trying to understand, and do something about, the crisis we face’.”
Erle C. Ellis, Anthropocene: A Very Short Introduction



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