Miami Herald (Sunday)

Scientist helped develop theory that man was imperiling Earth

- Associated Press

LONDON

James Lovelock, the British environmen­tal scientist whose influentia­l Gaia theory sees the Earth as a living organism gravely imperiled by human activity, has died on his 103rd birthday.

Lovelock’s family said Wednesday that he died the previous evening at his home in southwest England “surrounded by his family.” The family said his health had deteriorat­ed after a bad fall but that until six months ago Lovelock “was still able to walk along the coast near his home in Dorset and take part in interviews.”

Born in 1919 and raised in London, Lovelock studied chemistry, medicine and biophysics in the U.K. and the U.S.

In the 1940s and 1950s, he worked at the National Institute for Medical Research in London. Some of his experiment­s looked at the effect of temperatur­e on living organisms and involved freezing hamsters and then thawing them.

The animals survived.

Lovelock worked during the 1960s on NASA’s moon and Mars programs at the

Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. But he spent much of his career as an independen­t scientist outside of large academic institutio­ns.

Lovelock's contributi­ons to environmen­tal science included developing a highly sensitive electron capture detector to measure ozone-depleting chlorofluo­rocarbons in the atmosphere and pollutants in air, soil and water.

The Gaia hypothesis, developed by Lovelock and American microbiolo­gist Lynn Margulis and first proposed in the 1970s, saw the Earth itself as a complex, self-regulating system that created and maintained the conditions for life on the planet. The scientists said human activity had thrown the system dangerousl­y off-kilter.

A powerful communicat­or, Lovelock used books, speeches and interviews to warn of the desertific­ation, agricultur­al devastatio­n and mass migrations that climate change would bring.

“The biosphere and I are both in the last 1% or our lives,” Lovelock told The Guardian newspaper in 2020.

Initially dismissed by many scientists, the Gaia theory became influentia­l as concern about humanity’s impact on the planet grew, not least because of its power as a metaphor. Gaia is the Greek goddess of the Earth.

Lovelock did not mind being an outsider. He outraged many environmen­talists by supporting nuclear energy, saying it was the only way to stop global warming.

“Opposition to nuclear energy is based on irrational fear fed by Hollywoods­tyle fiction, the Green lobbies and the media,” he wrote in 2004. “These fears are unjustifie­d, and nuclear energy from its start in 1952 has proved to be the safest of all energy sources.”

Lovelock's final book “Novacene,” published as he turned 100 in 2019, proposed that humans will be replaced on Earth by cyborgs.

Although Lovelock was sometimes at odds with sections of the environmen­tal movement, Britain's only Green lawmaker, Caroline Lucas, tweeted that “the Green movement has lost a huge champion & intellect.”

Roger Highfield, science director at Britain's Science Museum, said Lovelock “was a nonconform­ist who had a unique vantage point that came from being, as he put it, half scientist and half inventor.”

Lovelock is survived by his wife Sally and children Christine, Jane, Andrew and John.

 ?? ?? James Lovelock built this gas chromatogr­aph.
James Lovelock built this gas chromatogr­aph.

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