The Kerryman (South Kerry Edition)

Who will tell our story when Earth becomes a wasteland?

- PAUL W.S. BOWLER

HAVE you ever wondered about what distinguis­hes our species from all the other animals? The late author Terry Pratchett insisted we are not Homo Sapiens (wise man) but Pan Narrans (the story telling chimpanzee­s). We describe the world, our place in the world and what that means to us, through story. These stories range from fantastica­l tales of dragons and aliens, to the more prosaic language of scientists naming stuff.

Not that scientists naming everything isn’t as important as caring about who should be allowed buy a particular field. For example, did you know we’re living in the Holocene Epoch. This literally means, ‘entirely recent’. Not very imaginativ­e I’ll grant you, but accurate. It began about 9,700 BCE and encompasse­s the entire span of human civilisati­on.

Now some scientists want to see a new epoch recognised. They insist that it be dated either from the period of the Industrial Revolution or from the beginning of the Atomic Age. They want this epoch to be called the Anthropoce­ne. What story are scientists trying to tell us with this single Greek word, Anthropoce­ne? The ‘anthropo’ parts means man and ‘cene’ means new. They want to name this epoch after us. Sounds a bit arrogant doesn’t it? Except the story is a bit scarier than that.

Our particular human species has been around about 250,000 years. We only began to get down to agricultur­e and urbanisati­on, or civilisati­on for short, about 10,000 years ago. That’s when we really got into telling stories. However, it wasn’t until the 1700s that we began to change the planet.

Every year since then our species has ramped up the amount of damage it’s done to this, our only home. About a dozen species are pushed into extinction every day, due to pollution, habitat destructio­n and poaching. It is estimated that by the middle of this century, up to a half of the species on this planet will be facing extinction. In the last 20 years alone, we’ve destroyed one tenth of the Earth’s wilderness. Just over 680 times the area of Kerry, gone.

Much of the natural world, its animals and fauna, including us, got our big break about 66 million ago when an asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs. This is described as the Fifth Mass Extinction Event in our planet’s history. Now there is a talk of a Sixth Mass Extinction. And it isn’t being caused by anything natural and unavoidabl­e; it’s us and our continued destructio­n of the environmen­t.

The damage is reaching a point where we might make Earth as uninhabita­ble for our species as we are already making it uninhabita­ble for a lot of other animals and plants.

Our species is not an asteroid but we are managing to do an asteroid’s work. Asteroids are unthinking destroyers of worlds. We are the storytelli­ng chimpanzee­s. But all our stories up to now have taught us that we own this planet and can do with it as we please. Our stories have made us entitled and ignorant.

Will calling this the Anthropoce­ne be enough to make us wise? Will story telling finally make us think? The dinosaurs reigned for millions of years, the only story they left behind is whatever we can decipher from their fossilised bones. I wonder who or what will tell our story if we don’t manage to write a new ending.

 ??  ?? More and more species are just about hanging in there as we continue to devastate our planet.
More and more species are just about hanging in there as we continue to devastate our planet.
 ??  ??

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