The Great Carbgenation

The-Great-Carbgenation-0.mp3
The-Great-Carbgenation-0.mp4
The-Great-Carbgenation-I.mp3
The-Great-Carbgenation-I.mp4
The-Great-Carbgenation-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Opposite of cyanobacteria
(We’ve made the world our cafeteria)
Releasing carbon…
(How long can this go on?)

[Verse 1]
Rabbits in Australia
Widespread destruction
Soon we’re memorabilia
Due to our dysfunction

[Chorus]
Opposite of cyanobacteria
(We’ve made the world our cafeteria)
Releasing carbon…
(How long can this go on?)

[Bridge]
Bark beetles and locusts
(Have we all gone nuts)
Termites and fungus
(We’re the problem among us)

[Verse 2]
Another question I’ll ask ya
About the reindeer in Alaska
Does mass consumption
Result in all’s starvation

[Chorus]
Opposite of cyanobacteria
(We’ve made the world our cafeteria)
Releasing carbon…
(How long can this go on?)

[Bridge]
Bark beetles and locusts
(Have we all gone nuts)
Termites and fungus
(We’re the problem among us)

[Chorus]
Opposite of cyanobacteria
(We’ve made the world our cafeteria)
Releasing carbon…
(How long can this go on?)

[Outro]
Termites and fungus
(We’re the problem among us)

A SCIENCE NOTE
There have been other species that have significantly altered or degraded their environment, sometimes to their own detriment. While humans are unique in the scale and speed of their impact—driving climate change, mass extinctions, and widespread ecosystem destruction—there are historical examples of other species that have dramatically changed their habitat, sometimes leading to their own decline.

1. Cyanobacteria and the Great Oxygenation Event (~2.4 billion years ago)

  • What happened? Cyanobacteria were among the first organisms to perform photosynthesis, releasing oxygen as a byproduct. Over time, they produced so much oxygen that they fundamentally changed Earth’s atmosphere, causing a mass extinction of anaerobic (oxygen-intolerant) life forms.
  • Impact: This event led to the Huronian glaciation, one of Earth’s first major ice ages, as methane—a potent greenhouse gas—was removed from the atmosphere. Many species that could not tolerate oxygen perished, marking one of Earth’s earliest extinction events caused by life itself.

2. Invasive Species (Rabbits in Australia, Locusts, Bark Beetles, etc.)

  • Rabbits in Australia: Introduced by humans in the 18th century, rabbits multiplied rapidly due to a lack of natural predators, leading to widespread destruction of vegetation, soil erosion, and biodiversity loss.
  • Bark Beetles: In North America, bark beetle populations have exploded due to warmer temperatures (ironically caused by human-induced climate change). The beetles have devastated forests, contributing to wildfires and ecosystem collapse.
  • Locusts: While not causing long-term environmental destruction, locust swarms have repeatedly decimated entire ecosystems, leading to famine and ecosystem stress.

3. Reindeer on St. Matthew Island (A Case of Overpopulation & Resource Collapse)

  • What happened? In 1944, 29 reindeer were introduced to St. Matthew Island (Alaska). With no natural predators and abundant lichen for food, their population exploded to 6,000 by 1963. However, they consumed their entire food supply, leading to mass starvation and a population collapse to just 42 individuals by 1966.
  • Impact: This is an example of overshoot and collapse, a pattern that some scientists compare to human overconsumption of resources.

4. Termites and Fungus Farming

  • Some termite species cultivate fungi to break down plant material. However, in some cases, they exhaust their food sources and cause collapses in their own colonies.
  • This is an example of a feedback loop similar to how human-induced deforestation and climate change can create conditions that undermine human survival.

The Human Difference: Scale and Awareness

  • Unlike other species, humans are aware of the damage they are causing but continue to do so due to economic and political incentives.
  • The speed and scope of human-induced climate change far exceed any past examples, leading to the possibility of irreversible planetary tipping points.

From the album “Natural

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

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