The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight Quotes
The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight: The Fate of the World and What We Can Do Before It's Too Late
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Thom Hartmann2,211 ratings, 4.20 average rating, 209 reviews
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The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight Quotes
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“And so we see people who are spiritually disconnected, living in boxes and driving in boxes, perhaps once a year going "out to nature" to get a small touch of what was once the daily experience of humans. These people seek escape. They sit in urban and suburban homes and feel miserable, not knowing why, experiencing anxiety and fear and pain that cannot be softened by drugs or TV or therapy because they are afflicted with a sickness of the soul, not of the mind.”
― The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight: The Fate of the World and What We Can Do Before It's Too Late
― The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight: The Fate of the World and What We Can Do Before It's Too Late
“There is more carbon in the atmosphere trapping heat and moisture than ever before in the 165,000 years of human history.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“So we now know the formula for extinction. Something happens to increase global temperatures five to six degrees, which triggers a melting of the frozen carbon and methane oceanic reserves that then leads to further global warming devastating life on Earth. Thus, the pressing question for us today is this: Can seven billion people on the planet burning fossil fuels imitate the sort of carbon greenhouse gas release caused by the Permian lava flows, or the K/T mass extinction impact or whatever warming caused the PETM? The answer is yes.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“grows near exponentially.”
― The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight: The Fate of the World and What We Can Do Before It's Too Late
― The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight: The Fate of the World and What We Can Do Before It's Too Late
“as the consequences of global warming further manifest themselves, political will for a hard cap will undoubtedly build, just like it did with sulfur dioxide that caused acid rain in the 1980s. It’s rarely discussed in the press, but President George Herbert Walker Bush successfully pushed through a cap-and-trade program for sulfur dioxide which radically reduced acid rain.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“Most Americans — 78% to be exact — drive fewer than 40 miles per day. Which means that for more than three-quarters of us, we really don’t need gasoline at all. Electric cars have an easy minimum range of 100 miles and a typical range of closer to 200 miles. And the technology is just getting started. We fight wars all over the world for oil, and we don’t even need it. That, in and of itself, is insane.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“Electric cars have an easy minimum range of 100 miles and a typical range of closer to 200 miles. And the technology is just getting started. We fight wars all over the world for oil, and we don’t even need it. That, in and of itself, is insane.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“It’s estimated that the Arctic, within seven years and maybe as soon as 2015, will have its first ice-free summer in the last 700,000 years (keep in mind that humans have only been on this planet for 165,000 years). Earlier projections predicted ice-free summers as far out in the future as 2080.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“There is no evidence when we look to the past for any precedent for the rate of change in atmospheric composition that we’re causing, and the rates of change in climate that we can expect, as we continue to burn fossil fuels and elevate these greenhouse gas concentrations.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“We are literally releasing the carbon dioxide that nature had locked up over a hundred million [years] down below the Earth. And we’re releasing all that carbon dioxide now at a rate a million times faster [than it accumulated].”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
“Dickens knew there were vast reserves of methane hydrate trapped frozen in sea-beds all around the world and wondered what would happen if a lot of that frozen methane on the sea floor had melted from a solid into a gas, and bubbled up from the ocean’s depths? Would it be enough to account for the “signature” of carbon-12 that geologists were finding in the rocks associated with the Permian Mass Extinction? So he went back to the lab and melted frozen methane in water warm enough. The results were dramatic. The gas not only dissolved into the water, but it also rose up out of the water and into the air. Dickens published a paper in 1999 suggesting that a 5 degree Celsius increase in ocean temperatures would have been adequate to melt enough methane hydrate crystals to create the Permian carbon-12 signature. And such a massive release of methane, itself a greenhouse gas vastly more potent than CO2, would also trigger a catastrophic, swift warming of the planet.”
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
― The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction
