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Homo Sapiens, the King of Adaptability?

Homo sapiens, the adaptable animal?

I grew up reading a lot of science fiction that was written in the 1950’s and 1960’s, and for a variety of reasons (among them, a key editor named John A. Campbell) a very popular “meme” in that era was a rather triumphalist view of man as the most adaptable and successful of all animals (on this planet and any others!) To be sure, this was grossly exaggerated, and I don’t think the writers of that era fully appreciated the relatively short time window in which homo sap has flourished relative to, e.g., the croocodile (250mya).

This concept of taking pride in adaptability seems to have disappeared into the cultural trashbin during the 60s and 70s, which is odd since the adaptive pressures on society in the late 60s were among the most intense in recorded histories. It’s also odd that the concept has not become more common again as we appreciate more and more that the human appropriation of net primary productivity is somewhere between 30 and 50% (Imhoff, Haberl). We are nothing if not successful at adapting the environment to our needs! Instead, our dominant reaction to climate change seems to be “change is bad.”

Not that there isn’t a lot of bad news, but it’s odd that there isn’t a more balanced perception that it is, in fact, kind of good news that the Arctic Sea is becoming navigable. Generally, navigable seas are viewed as a good thing …

My question for the group: is adaptability back? Should we be urging people once more to take pride in human adaptability?

via LinkedIn: View Discussion: °AdaptAbility – The Climate Adaptation Network.

U.S. has already lost this Cold War

The U.S. has already lost the Cold War for the Arctic. We have never been serious about icebreakers, and we are at a huge disadvantage in geography vis-a-vis Canada and Russia.

Arctic cold war as US sends a ship to claim riches under the ocean – Times Online

A US Coast Guard cutter will depart for the Arctic this week as part of a race against Russia to claim the vast spoils of oil and natural gas below the sea floor that both nations are scrambling to exploit.

The cutter Healy will leave Barrow, Alaska, tomorrow on a three-week journey to map the Arctic Ocean floor in a relatively unexplored area at the northern edge of the Beaufort Sea, in an attempt to bolster US claims to the area by proving that it is part of its extended outer continental shelf.

The rush to stake out territory across the Arctic has intensified since last August, when a Russian submarine planted the nation’s flag on the sea floor beneath the North Pole, which was viewed as a provocative land grab.