Big Think Interview With Peter Ward | Big Think

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  • Опубліковано 26 чер 2024
  • Big Think Interview With Peter Ward
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    An interview with the biologist and paleontologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.
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    Peter Ward:
    Peter Ward conducts his research within The Environment Institute's Sprigg Geobiolgy Centre at the University of Adelaide.
    Peter Ward has been active in Paleontology, Biology, and more recently, Astrobiology for more than 40 years. Since his Ph.D. in 1976, Ward has published more than 140 scientific papers dealing with paleontological, zoological, and astronomical topics.
    He is an acknowledged world expert on mass extinctions and the role of extraterrestrial impacts on Earth. Ward was the Principal Investigator of the University of Washington node of the NASA Astrobiology Institute from 2001-2006, and in that capacity led a team of over 40 scientists and students. His career was profiled by the Pulitzer Prize winning reporter William Dietrich in The Seattle Times article "Prophet, Populist, Poet of Science."
    Peter has written a memoir of his research on the Nautilus for Nautilus magazine's "Ingenious" feature entitled "Nautilus and me. My wonderful, dangerous life with the amazing Nautilus."
    His books include the best-selling "Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe" (co-author Donald Brownlee, 2000), "Under a Green Sky: Global Warming, the Mass Extinctions of the Past, and What They Can Tell Us About Our Future" (2007), and "The Medea Hypothesis: Is Life on Earth Ultimately Self-Destructive?" (2009).
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    TRANSCRIPT:
    Peter Ward: Peter Ward, W-A-R-D. Department of Geology and Department of Biology at the University of Washington in Seattle.
    Question: Based on your findings in Antarctica, how do you rnassess the future of the planet?
    Peter Ward: Well, the earth has certainly gone through a lot rnof hot times and cold times back and forth, and forth and back. And rnwhat I do is study deep time by looking at CO2 levels and relative rntemperatures and we are coming out of a cold time and moving into a hot rntime. However, for this particular time in history, we should be movingrn back into a cold time.
    If we take the entire ice ages in the last 2 ½ million years, we’ve rnbeen in a 10,000 year calm of warmth, and it’s time to go cold again, rnand yet it doesn’t seem to be in our cards because of all the carbon rndioxide we have put into the system. In fact, we are now at levels thatrn the world has not seen for the last 40 million years and we will soon rnbe at carbon dioxide levels that were 100 million years ago when we had arn true hothouse world.
    So, the game has been changed.
    Question: What specific research did you conduct during rnyour Antarctic expedition?
    Peter Ward: Our Antarctic work is to look at the nature of rnglobal temperatures at the end of the Cretaceous Period. Cretaceous rnended 65 million years ago. The **** end, and I do believe this is thatrn large asteroid hit us in the Yucatan Peninsula causing the mass rnextinction. But we’re trying to see what happened in the 10 million rnyears prior to that because we know at that time; there was a gigantic rnvolcanic event in India. These are a big flood basalts they’re called. rn It’s not a single point source volcano, but imagine enormous areas of rnthe earth, creeping lava coming out of the cracks and flowing slowly allrn around scaring dinosaurs to death, probably running in front of this rnstuff, probably killed a few dinosaurs, but what it did do was vent an rnenormous quantity of volcanic carbon dioxide and other gasses into the rnatmosphere.
    Now, we wanted to know, was there any precursor to the impact. Was rnthe impact just the coup de grace coming on an already affected world rnand it does seem to be that? And the best place to look at this - the rnbest place to understand anything about global warming isn’t at the rntropics. That’s where temperatures change the least, but it’s at the rnpoles where you have the greatest absolute change. So, we found a ten rndegrees centigrade change from colder to warmer in the last two to threern million years prior to the impact itself. The place really did warm rnup, and fast, from a lot of CO2 in the atmosphere. Now, there’s rnobviously parallels to what’s going on in the world today.
    Question: What was your methodology in measuring CO2 levelsrn in Antarctica?
    Read the full transcript at bigthink.com/videos/big-think...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @kristinax5052
    @kristinax5052 4 роки тому +5

    most watchable guy I've ever seen.. thank you Peter.. you're amazing

    • @sunnystreet4950
      @sunnystreet4950 4 роки тому +2

      Kristina X he’s my professor and I can definitely tell you that’s very true!

  • @chrismoore5571
    @chrismoore5571 5 років тому +1

    Love your work Peter, Thanks for being Awesome.

  • @bimmjim
    @bimmjim 8 років тому +1

    Note: Anoxic Black Sea and hydrogen sulfide. 7:30 The Global Ocean is dying now and if it dies, we do go extinct.

  • @pward6346
    @pward6346 3 роки тому +1

    I'm also called Peter Ward

  • @rd264
    @rd264 11 років тому

    this a great talk. Its so packed with key problems. certainly i see the Medea driving US Congress. I do not see 'science related' video games emerging. I do not see any cultural evolution, off ramps or any reason for optimism.

  • @katesisco
    @katesisco 6 років тому

    You reached me. 71, BS Geology M'boro TN MTSU with no contacts with academia so it's worthless.

  • @katesisco
    @katesisco 6 років тому

    How can we break up cities and recreating them in planned walking/shopping centers with business/farm outer rings?

    • @staninjapan07
      @staninjapan07 4 роки тому

      Like the Venus Project fella, Jacque?
      He was ridiculed and ignored, but he had some great ideas.
      He was probably ignored mainly as he believed we should abolish the current monetary system as part of what is necessary.
      The Venus Project lives on, I think.

  • @bimmjim
    @bimmjim 8 років тому

    Ward puts out a tremendous number of ideas per minute and most of them are excellent. However, he is mistaken on a few important things. In PaleoClimatology now (June 2016) there is a lot of NEW data flowing in. It can be seen that the more recent Pleistocene is much more relevant to our present and future situation. We are probably headed back into a Pleistocene Climate regime with its set points and feedback loops. Now PalioClimateologists are trying to figure out what those Feedback loops were. We don't know.
    Lucy lived in the Pleistocene, about four million years ago. If you are researching this, you must get right up-to-date.

    • @bimmjim
      @bimmjim 7 років тому

      Ha ha. Nobody noticed the mistake I made in this comment. Or maybe it was the spellchecker. Ha ha. Of course, I meant the Pliocene and not the Pleistocene.

    • @ragereset2795
      @ragereset2795 2 роки тому

      @@bimmjim I noticed, and clicked the link to see if someone had saved me correcting you. And they had. And it was you.

  • @bimmjim
    @bimmjim 8 років тому +1

    Ward is making a few mistakes when he starts talking about Space. He is not an astronomer. For example: If you had a Super Earth it would have greater gravity and would, therefore, have a much denser atmosphere. Heavier animals could fly in a denser atmosphere. He has a curious Earth-Centric view of life.
    If Earth had a four hour day, life would have adapted to that. No problem.

  • @katesisco
    @katesisco 6 років тому

    Science now has shown magnetizing the prefrontal complex acts to lower aggression after an emotion rise. I connected this experiment with the deep history of 'tamed' cattle and dogs. Perhaps a plasma charge affected the world in specific areas and even the people were 'tamed.' This would explain how Egypt was unified North and South without the violence seen in all other absorptions. Of course, those not 'tamed' would eliminate the 'tamed' and you would have the same as now.