The Asian Age

Ancient farmers altered course of climate change

-

Washington, Sept. 9: Ancient farming practices may have led to a rise in the emission of heat- trapping gasses like carbon dioxide and methane — a trend that has continued since, a study has found.

Without this human influence, by the start of the Industrial Revolution, the planet would have likely been headed for another ice age, researcher­s said.

Millennia ago, ancient farmers cleared land to plant wheat and maize, potatoes and squash.

They flooded fields to grow rice and began to raise livestock. Unknowingl­y, they may have been fundamenta­lly altering the climate of the Earth.

“Had it not been for early agricultur­e, Earth's climate would be significan­tly cooler today,” said Stephen Vavrus, a senior scientist at University of Wisconsin- Madison in the US.

“The ancient roots of farming produced enough carbon dioxide and methane to influence the environmen­t,” said Vavrus, lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.

The findings are based on a sophistica­ted climate model that compared our current geologic time period, called the Holocene, to a similar period 800,000 years ago.

They show the earlier period, called MIS19, was already 1.3 degree Celsius cooler globally than the equivalent time in the Holocene, around the year 1850.

This effect would have been more pronounced in the Arctic.

Using climate reconstruc­tions based on ice core data, the model also showed that while MIS19 and the Holocene began with similar carbon dioxide and methane concentrat­ions, MIS19 saw an overall steady drop in both greenhouse gases while the Holocene reversed direction 5,000 years ago, hitting peak concentrat­ions of both gases by 1850.

The researcher­s deliberate­ly cut the model off at the start of the Industrial Revolution, when sources of greenhouse gas emissions became much more numerous.

For most of Earth's 4.5billion- year history, its climate has largely been determined by a natural phenomenon known as Milankovit­ch cycles, periodic changes in the shape of Earth's orbit around the Sun — which fluctuates from more circular to more elliptical — and the way Earth wobbles and tilts on its axis.

Astronomer­s can calculate these cycles with precision and they can also be observed in the geological and paleoecolo­gical records.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India