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万物简史英文版_比尔·布莱森-第112章

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yas; which is one of the first to recolonize land after an ice sheet withdraws。 therewas also an older dryas period; but it wasn鈥檛 so sharp。) at the end of this thousand…year onslaught average temperatures leapt again; by as much as seven degrees in twenty years;which doesn鈥檛 sound terribly dramatic but is equivalent to exchanging the climate ofscandinavia for that of the mediterranean in just two decades。 locally; changes have beeneven more dramatic。 greenland ice cores show the temperatures there changing by as much asfifteen degrees in ten years; drastically altering rainfall patterns and growing conditions。 thismust have been unsettling enough on a thinly populated planet。 today the consequenceswould be pretty well unimaginable。

what is most alarming is that we have no idea鈥攏one鈥攚hat natural phenomena could soswiftly rattle earth鈥檚 thermometer。 as elizabeth kolbert; writing in the new yorker; hasobserved: 鈥渘o known external force; or even any that has been hypothesized; seems capableof yanking the temperature back and forth as violently; and as often; as these cores haveshown to be the case。鈥潯here seems to be; she adds; 鈥渟ome vast and terrible feedback loop;鈥

probably involving the oceans and disruptions of the normal patterns of ocean circulation; butall this is a long way from being understood。

one theory is that the heavy inflow of meltwater to the seas at the beginning of theyounger dryas reduced the saltiness (and thus density) of northern oceans; causing the gulfstream to swerve to the south; like a driver trying to avoid a collision。 deprived of the gulfstream鈥檚 warmth; the northern latitudes returned to chilly conditions。 but this doesn鈥檛 begin toexplain why a thousand years later when the earth warmed once again the gulf stream didn鈥檛veer as before。 instead; we were given the period of unusual tranquility known as theholocene; the time in which we live now。

there is no reason to suppose that this stretch of climatic stability should last much longer。

in fact; some authorities believe that we are in for even worse than what went before。 it isnatural to suppose that global warming would act as a useful counterweight to the earth鈥檚tendency to plunge back into glacial conditions。 however; as kolbert has pointed out; whenyou are confronted with a fluctuating and unpredictable climate 鈥渢he last thing you鈥檇 want todo is conduct a vast unsupervised experiment on it。鈥潯t has even been suggested; with moreplausibility than would at first seem evident; that an ice age might actually be induced by arise in temperatures。 the idea is that a slight warming would enhance evaporation rates andincrease cloud cover; leading in the higher latitudes to more persistent accumulations of snow。

in fact; global warming could plausibly; if paradoxically; lead to powerful localized cooling innorth america and northern europe。

climate is the product of so many variables鈥攔ising and falling carbon dioxide levels; theshifts of continents; solar activity; the stately wobbles of the milankovitch cycles鈥攖hat it is asdifficult to prehend the events of the past as it is to predict those of the future。 much issimply beyond us。 take antarctica。 for at least twenty million years after it settled over thesouth pole antarctica remained covered in plants and free of ice。 that simply shouldn鈥檛 havebeen possible。

no less intriguing are the known ranges of some late dinosaurs。 the british geologiststephen drury notes that forests within 10 degrees latitude of the north pole were home togreat beasts; including tyrannosaurus rex。 鈥渢hat is bizarre;鈥潯e writes; 鈥渇or such a highlatitude is continually dark for three months of the year。鈥潯oreover; there is now evidencethat these high latitudes suffered severe winters。 oxygen isotope studies suggest that theclimate around fairbanks; alaska; was about the same in the late cretaceous period as it isnow。 so what was tyrannosaurus doing there? either it migrated seasonally over enormousdistances or it spent much of the year in snowdrifts in the dark。 in australia鈥攚hich at that time was more polar in its orientation鈥攁 retreat to warmer climes wasn鈥檛 possible。 howdinosaurs managed to survive in such conditions can only be guessed。

one thought to bear in mind is that if the ice sheets did start to form again for whateverreason; there is a lot more water for them to draw on this time。 the great lakes; hudson bay;the countless lakes of canada鈥攖hese weren鈥檛 there to fuel the last ice age。 they were createdby it。

on the other hand; the next phase of our history could see us melting a lot of ice rather thanmaking it。 if all the ice sheets melted; sea levels would rise by two hundred feet鈥攖he heightof a twenty…story building鈥攁nd every coastal city in the world would be inundated。 morelikely; at least in the short term; is the collapse of the west antarctic ice sheet。 in the past fiftyyears the waters around it have warmed by 2。5 degrees centigrade; and collapses haveincreased dramatically。 because of the underlying geology of the area; a large…scale collapseis all the more possible。 if so; sea levels globally would rise鈥攁nd pretty quickly鈥攂y betweenfifteen and twenty feet on average。

the extraordinary fact is that we don鈥檛 know which is more likely; a future offering us eonsof perishing frigidity or one giving us equal expanses of steamy heat。 only one thing iscertain: we live on a knife edge。

in the long run; incidentally; ice ages are by no means bad news for the planet。 they grindup rocks and leave behind new soils of sumptuous richness; and gouge out fresh water lakesthat provide abundant nutritive possibilities for hundreds of species of being。 they act as aspur to migration and keep the planet dynamic。 as tim flannery has remarked: 鈥渢here is onlyone question you need ask of a continent in order to determine the fate of its people: 鈥榙id youhave a good ice age?鈥櫋♀潯nd with that in mind; it鈥檚 time to look at a species of ape that trulydid。

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28    THE MYSTERIOUS BIPED

锝炲皬锛滆t xt锛嬶紜澶╋紴鍫
just before christmas 1887; a young dutch doctor with an un…dutch name; marieeug猫ne fran?ois thomas dubois; arrived in sumatra; in the dutch east indies; with theintention of finding the earliest human remains on earth。

1several things were extraordinary about this。 to begin with; no one had ever gone lookingfor ancient human bones before。 everything that had been found to this point had been foundaccidentally; and nothing in dubois鈥檚 background suggested that he was the ideal candidate tomake the process intentional。 he was an anatomist by training with no background inpaleontology。 nor was there any special reason to suppose that the east indies would holdearly human remains。 logic dictated that if ancient people were to be found at all; it would beon a large and long…populated landmass; not in the parative fastness of an archipelago。

dubois was driven to the east indies on nothing stronger than a hunch; the availability ofemployment; and the knowledge that sumatra was full of caves; the environment in whichmost of the important hominid fossils had so far been found。 what is most extraordinary in allthis鈥攏early miraculous; really鈥攊s that he found what he was looking for。

at the time dubois conceived his plan to search for a missing link; the human fossil recordconsisted of very little: five inplete neandertal skeletons; one partial jawbone of uncertainprovenance; and a half…dozen ice…age humans recently found by railway workers in a cave at acliff called cro…magnon near les eyzies; france。 of the neandertal specimens; the bestpreserved was sitting unremarked on a shelf in london。 it had been found by workers blastingrock from a quarry in gibraltar in 1848; so its preservation was a wonder; but unfortunatelyno one yet appreciated what it was。 after being briefly described at a meeting of the gibraltarscientific society; it had been sent to the hunterian museum in london; where it remainedundisturbed but for an occasional light dusting for over half a century。 the first formaldescription of it wasn鈥檛 written until 1907; and then by a geologist named william sollas鈥渨ith 
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