Monday, June 08, 2015

Facts for Fiction: The Next Species

It's hard enough contemplating one's own mortality, let alone that of the species to which we belong. However, in The Next Species: The Future of Evolution in the Aftermath of Man, Michael Tennesen does just that. After all, we are the only species that keeps a Doomsday Clock, and the hands are only three minutes shy of midnight.

Tennesen starts by looking at previous mass extinctions to examine what caused them. The most famous mass extinction was that of the dinosaurs, which was caused when an asteroid collided with the Earth and raised a giant dust cloud that blocked the sun. However, climate change, such as global warming or cooling, also contributes to extinction, and there are several warning signs already present. Tennesen speculates on our end--and that of other species. However, every end is also a beginning. Quick-growing, "weedy" species often move in to take advantage of cleared niches, but they are gradually replaced by bigger, more specialized species. In time, big animals may return.

Is there no hope for humans? Well, there is the possibility of establishing a colony on Mars as a backup for Earth. Human evolution isn't dead; even if a catastrophe wipes out the vast majority of us, the rest could repopulate and perhaps establish a successor species to Homo sapiens. (There is evidence our species did pass through a genetic bottleneck at one point.) Of course, details about what such a species might look like are best left to the science fiction writers.

Do you think our species is as close to destruction as the Doomsday Clock says, or is there still hope for us and our children? Feel free to discuss in the comments.

7 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

When is Judgement Day? No one knows. But we will not die out.
My wife and I are of faith, and she says the dinosaurs just missed the boat. (The Ark.)

Sandra Ulbrich Almazan said...

Alex, I hear that's what happened to the unicorns too.

Maria Zannini said...

It's interesting that dinosaurs had a run of millions of years, while homo sapiens barely scratched out a couple hundred thousand years. Maybe being 'too smart' is our own undoing.

Will we survive?

Everything has a cycle. Civilizations rise and fall and certainly even the human race share a similar fate. I just hope we have a few smart humans who can splinter off to start anew somewhere else. We may evolve into something else, but our essence will still be in the DNA chain.

Jay Noel said...

When you look at the world's nuclear arsenal, we've got the power to destroy ourselves with just a push of a button. So, we're pretty close to doomsday EVERY DAY.

Sandra Ulbrich Almazan said...

Maria, good point. I just hope Alex will be a survivor and help generate the next species.

Jay, the Doomsday Clock was originally started to track the threat of nuclear disaster, but they're considering other threats too.

PT Dilloway said...

In a few billion years the sun will destroy the Earth anyway, so one way or another we're doomed.

Sandra Ulbrich Almazan said...

Unless we manage to escape the solar system, Pat.

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