

An edition of Wecskaop (2007)
What Every Citizen Should Know About Our Planet
By August Anson
Publish Date
2007, First Edition
Publisher
M. Arman Publishing
Language
-
Pages
332
Description:
Population calamities in seemingly "empty" environments? This is a book about earth's carrying capacity for an industrialized humanity and climb-and-collapse population calamities in real-world conditions. Beginning with a world population of two billion in 1930, our newest numbers include seven billion in 2011 (FIVE additional billions in a single human lifetime), with still more billions (numbers eight and nine) on-track to arrive by mid-century. Given the compelling evidence for the impacts and damage that our species is already inflicting (when only half of us are industrialized), our current trajectories already exhibit late-phase exponential conditions. Sample chapters include "Nine assumptions that invite calamity," "The paleolithic, the neolithic, and now," and "Carrying capacity and limiting factors," while sample section topics include "the lungs of the world," "stoplights and twisting mountain roads," "the wheels are coming off out there," "tipping points," and "unintended consequences."
subjects: population, ecology, demographics, carrying capacities, limiting factors, climb-and-collapse, exponential mathematics, J-curves, climate, tipping points, world population levels, conservation
Places: China, the Middle East, Madison Square Garden, Rome, Mediterranean basin, Alaska, Madagascar, Canada, New England, California, Arizona, Pacific Ocean, Venus, Mumbai, Tokyo, Cairo, Liberia, Los Angeles, NYC, Rio de Janiero, Mars, Australia, New Zealand, Greenland, Aral Sea, Sri Lanka, Brazil, Costa Rica, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Chad, Cameroon, Lagos, Davos, tropics, Easter Island, New Orleans
Times: Circa 8000 B.C. through 2050