
CARTA - Humans: The Planet-Altering Apes - Human Transformation From Environmental Managers to Ecosystem Damagers with Jessica Thompson
CARTA - Humans: The Planet-Altering Apes
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego
May 23, 202220m 45s
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Show Notes
Beginning with Homo erectus at least a million years ago, hominins have used fire to engineer the world around them. The earliest uses of fire surely included cooking, changing the energy yields of foods. Such innovations altered the course of our evolution, facilitating the evolution of species that could adapt quickly using tools and social ingenuity. Within the last 200,000 years, hominins also used fire to change the material properties of stone, pigments, sap, and wood. While these changes represent a fundamental shift in the role of humans as dominant shapers of their environments through years of evolution and innovation, ecosystems adjusted as early humans remained embedded within them. However, humans are not now simply shifting to another sustainable balance - we are pushing environmental thresholds across one tipping point after the next. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37907]
Topics
CARTAanthropologyanthropogenyevolutiongeneticsecosystemenvironmentenvironmental managersfiretools innovationsEarthplanetapeshumanshomininsHomo erectusAnthropology and ArchaeologyAnthropology and ArchaeologyEcologyth