Posted on 10/01/2018 9:21:20 AM PDT by Red Badger
Credit: Chris Ford via Flickr
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Humans did not accelerate the decline of the 'Green Sahara' and may have managed to hold back the onset of the Sahara desert by around 500 years, according to new research led by UCL.
The study by a team of geographers and archaeologists from UCL and King's College London, published in Nature Communications, suggests that early pastoralists in North Africa combined detailed knowledge of the environment with newly domesticated species to deal with the long-term drying trend.
It is thought that early pastoralists in North Africa developed intricate ways to efficiently manage sparse vegetation and relatively dry and low fertility soils.
Dr. Chris Brierley (UCL Geography), lead author, said: "The possibility that humans could have had a stabilising influence on the environment has significant implications. We contest the common narrative that past human-environment interactions must always be one of over-exploitation and degradation.
"The fact that societies practising 'pastoralism' persisted in this region for so long and invested both economically and ideologically in the local landscape, does not support the scenario of over-exploitation. Our study shows that increasing human population and sustainable pastoralism did not accelerateand may even have delayedthe decline of the 'Green Sahara'."
Around 8,000 years ago, the Sahara wasn't desert, but instead was a vibrant ecosystem that supported hunter-gatherers and fisherfolk. The 'Green Sahara' - the colloquial term for the African Humid Period was the period in which North Africa became much wetter than it is today thanks to a series of monsoons.
As the Earth's orbit slowly changed, the rain started to reduce, and the vegetation started to die back. Around 5,500 years ago, the ecosystem in the Sahara went into a terminal decline towards the desert we have today.
Pastoralism (nomadic or semi-nomadic cattle-herders) blossomed in the Sahara from around 1000 years before that collapse. Previous studies have put the blame for the collapse of the 'Green Sahara' onto these nomads who have often been marginalised in history, but this latest studies dispels that myth.
The study uses a novel climate-vegetation model to determine whether the end of the African Humid Period occurred earlier than expected. The model keeps track of variables such as vegetation and rainfall, and other processes such as the amount of energy coming from the sun, and the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
The model found that the 'Green Sahara' should have collapsed earlier than it did. This suggests that pastoralists lasted longer than expected and the techniques they used helped them to adapt to the environmental changes.
Dr. Brierley added: "Those places where pastoralists last longer are where there are more resources. It's a good adaptation to the climate change taking place at the time. There is now work today looking at what we can learn from nomadic pastoralists, such as selective grazing strategies, which can be applied to sustainable adaption to desertification that we expect from future climate change."
Dr. Katie Manning (King's College London), concluded: "Despite the largely inhospitable conditions of the Sahara today, it is not hard to find evidence of human occupation from the last 11,000 years. Thousands of rock art sites illustrate a lush environment, large-game hunting and livestock herding. The spread of domestic animals across the Sahara occurred at a time of increasing climatic instability, and yet, these pastoralist populations thrived.
"It is likely that strategies used by contemporary traditional herders, such as seasonal movement and selective grazing, were also used by these early pastoralists, helping to maintain an otherwise deteriorating ecosystem."
Explore further: Did humans create the Sahara Desert?
Journal reference: Nature Communications
Provided by: University College London
“The desert was accelerated during the muslim conquest of North Africa when they used very large herds of goats to strip the vegetation from most of North Africa which had been the grain basket to the Ancient World.”
Awhhh, com’on..You know “whitey” taught them how to drill wells so they could ‘stay in place’..and that’s how the animals ate up all the local vegetation..and ‘ruined’ it all.
WHITEY’S FAULT !
Where did all the sand in the Sahara come from?..................
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And they want to pretend that its ‘science.’
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Scores would show up
Are they the Russian equivalent of Harley-Davidson Cycles? Just not as reliable? ................
The earth orbits the sun and it revolves on its own axis.
The wobble occurs on the earth’s axis while the orbit remains unchanged.
Agreed.
WHITEYS FAULT !
—
Islam’s fault. And what I wrote is history. Not a joking matter.
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Well worth reading:
ICE AGE CIVILIZATIONS
JAMES I. NIENHUIS
HOUSTON, TEXAS
2006
Copyright © 2006 by James I. Nienhuis
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any
means, electronic or mechanical. This includes photocopying or recording by any information storage
or retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher.
WWW.GE N E S I SVE R AC I T Y .COM
Genesis Veracity
P.O. Box 850
5773 Woodway Drive
Houston, Texas 77057
1-866-GEOFACT
ISBN Number: 0-9726206-2-1
.
Son of a beach...
“Humans delayed the onset of the Sahara desert by 500 years”
Woo hoo! Way to go humans!
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>> “Islams fault. And what I wrote is history. Not a joking matter.” <<
Islam was born long after the desert (7th century)
But I agree with much of your premise. The people that later became Islam did create part of the problem.
The rest was the unavoidable consequence of the Genesis 6 judgment.
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Several years ago divers found evidence of a prehistoric hunting camp beneath Lake Huron, created when the lake was about 250 feet lower and caribou used to migrate thru there.......
Up until the Muslims swept through North Africa, the area from Egypt to Mauritania fed the ancient world from it huge grain and animal farms. After the invasion, there was hardly any vegetation and the area turned into a semi-arid desert - then the Sahara began to creep northward.
Without man, much of those mountain and hillsides would have washed away. With man, it not only produced an abundance of food, but beauty which even the UN designated World Heritage Sites. Man was/is a pretty clever beast before libtardism came along.
But mostly, it was the old farmer and his wife. Word got around about what a beautiful farm they had created and, one day, even the local pastor had to come and see. Like everyone else, he was amazed. "You and the Lord have done a splendid job since you've bought this farm," he exclaimed!
Said the old farmer, "You should've seen it when just the Lord had it!"
Yes it does, it Milankovitch cycles are well understood.
What?? Humans did something good for the planet?? Thats not what I learned in school!
Islam seems to have a real skill for turning landscapes into barren wastelands.
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