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Tuesday 16 May 2023

At The Mercy Of The Climate

 

Image: Unsplash


If you have read enough ancient history, or maybe even just a little bit, you will know that ancient civilisations died for a host of different reasons. Sometimes they were conquered by more powerful nations, sometimes they ran out key resources to make their society function, sometimes they died of plague or disease, or other disasters, sometimes they were just overrun by constant streams of invaders. But there is a key element that was often involved with a host of these other factors: climate change.

Climate Change is by no means a modern phenomenon, or a man-made issue for civilisation. Climate change is a constant factor in this fallen world, where everything, including the aggregate weather of regions and the world, otherwise known as climate, are subject to decay because of Adam’s sin. Sometimes this took out very complex and sophisticated societies. Like the Indus Valley civilisation. 

There is much we don’t know about this society, as it thoroughly disappeared,  

“But one mystery looms larger than the rest: How, when and why did the Indus valley civilization disappear?

Experts generally agree that a drought hit the Indus valley around 4,200 years ago, but the “exact timing and magnitude” of these dry conditions was unknown, researchers said in a study published April 4 in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

Answers to these elusive questions were hiding in the Dharamjali Cave in the Himalayas.

Near the far end of the shallow cave, researchers seeking to solve the mystery found a stalagmite with a telling combination of features. The cave formation was in a weather-susceptible habitat — yet protected enough that it formed during this ancient period.

Based on layered mineral deposits in the stalagmite, researchers reconstructed historic rainfall patterns beginning 4,200 years ago, the study said.

Their results offered a slightly different and much more detailed picture of ancient life than that of previous experts. Rather than a “single megadrought that lasted about 100–200 years,” researchers identified “three major dry periods” between 4,200 and 3,900 years ago with each period “lasting 25–90 years.”[i]

What killed this civilisation? Climate change in other words. Their climate changed and they could no longer sustain their way of life. Some might see in this a strong argument for us to do more to combat climate change. But, really it should teach us the opposite. Why?

Well, all human societies to one degree or another are dependent on their climate. If the weather is too extreme, then it makes it hard for life to flourish, which is why the only people in Antarctica, officially at least, are seasonal researchers doing various kinds of surveys and the like. The closer you get to the poles, the lower populations get. The more desert you live amongst the same thing happens. So, all civilisations must work within their local climates.

But modern technology has enabled humanity to largely overcome the dangers of climate. We don’t have to rely on sunshine alone to warm us, we can live in coal powered heated homes. We can truck or pipe water in over long distances. We can overcome the dangers of travelling on foot across dangerous environmental hazards with trains, planes and automobiles, and boats. We can overcome many of the ways that nature wants to kill us, with floods, storms, cyclones and other elemental dangers.

Ancient societies often disappeared in bad climates, precisely because they were dependent on various renewable technologies and did not have the vast access to the fossil fuels that we do. They were completely at the mercy of the climate, we have overcome that in large measure. And forcing society to go back to wind, sun and water driven power, will place human civilisation again at the mercy of windless days, cloudy seasons and low water flow. All these things can slow even a modern society down. But if they went on for too long ancient societies could not survive. Modern society can counteract these issues to a larger degree. 

Living at the mercy of the climate is a foolish way to go as a society. We want to work with nature wisely and sustainably. But we should not see nature as a benign force that means humanity no harm. Nature, and this includes the full rage of climate, can be ruthless. It has no pity for mankind or beast, and therefore, we should not reject the Christian principle that it needs subjection, or we will place our way of life in great jeopardy.

 

References

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