2025-09-29
30 分钟This is The Guardian.
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Are we on our way to the sixth major mass extinction?
By Peter Brannon, read by Lincoln Conway.
Daniel Rothman works on the top floor of the building that houses the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
MIT, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences.
a big concrete domino that overlooks the Charles River in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Rothman is a mathematician interested in the behavior of complex systems,
and in the Earth, he has found a worthy subject.
Specifically, Rothman studies the behavior of the planet's carbon cycle deep in the Earth's past,
especially in those rare times it was pushed over a threshold and spun out of control,
regaining its equilibrium only after hundreds of thousands of years.
Seeing as it's all carbon-based life here on Earth,
these extreme disruptions to the carbon cycle express themselves as,
and are better known as, mass extinctions.
Worryingly, in the past few decades, geologists have discovered that many, if not most,
of the mass extinctions of Earth history, including the very worst ever by far,
were caused not by asteroids as they had expected,