It took me a while to get to this one.

 

Prothero’s hypothesis is quite plausible to me.  I have the source for an
equivalent catastrophe in my own backyard (okay, I have to cross one road to
get onto a trail system that takes me to Yellowstone).  Large caldera
explosions, like those that have happened in Yellowstone and Toba, can
create nuclear winter.  There will be a lot more than 72,000 survivors when
(not if) Yellowstone blows again, but it will create chaos and death around
the world.

 

I won't have to wonder about the fate of the world very long if I am still
alive when Yellowstone erupts.  I have heard educated predictions that will
give me an hour or less to live.  There are thick layers of tufa (ash turned
to stone) all around my town from previous Yellowstone hot spot eruptions.
Maybe they will be plucking my remains from the stone, Pompeii-like, in a
couple of thousands of years from now. 

 

Chris 

 

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2012 12:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] 72, 000 BC

 

 

 

 

skepticblog

 

 

When Humans Nearly Vanished 

by Donald Prothero, Oct 31 2012

 

According to some estimates, on Halloween of last year (2011), the
population of humans on this planet passed the 7 billion threshold. Today,
humans (along with their domesticated animals) are the most abundant large
vertebrates on the planet, and the problem of human overpopulation (and its
effects on the overexploitation of the planet’s resources) is one that vexes
people worldwide. It’s hard to imagine the idea that humans have not always
been so numerous, or that we have not always been the dominant large species
on the planet. But it was not always so. As I describe in my recent book
Catastrophes!, about 74,000 years ago a volcanic eruption occurred on Mt.
Toba in Sumatra which caused a global “volcanic winter” that nearly wiped
out humans completely.

Studies of the ash deposits in the adjacent ocean floor around Sumatra show
that Toba ejected 2800 cubic km of material. It was believed to be the
largest volcanic explosion in the last 25 million years. It released the
energy equivalent of 1 gigaton of TNT, forty times larger than our largest
nuclear bomb explosion, and about 3000 times as powerful as the eruption of
Mt. St. Helens. Toba injected so much ash into the stratosphere that the ash
clouds blocked the sun’s radiation. It caused a “volcanic winter” that
lasted almost 10 years, and caused global temperature to drop by 3-5°C
(5-9°F), further amplifying the cold of the ongoing Ice Ages. The tree line
and snow line dropped 3000 m (9000 feet) lower than today, making most high
elevations uninhabitable. Global mean temperatures dropped to only 15°C
after 3 years, and took a full decade to recover to pre-eruption
temperatures. Ice cores from Greenland show the evidence of this dramatic
cooling in the trapped ash and ancient air bubbles, although so far it has
not been detected in Antarctic ice cores (Rampino and Self, 1993a, 1993b;
Robock et al., 2009). 

A number of scientists have argued that the Toba catastrophe nearly wiped
out the human race, leaving a genetic bottleneck of only about 1,000 to
10,000 breeding pairs of humans worldwide (Rampino and Self, 1993b
<http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/pdf_extract/262/5142/1955> ; Ambrose, 1998
<http://www.bradshawfoundation.com/stanley_ambrose.php> ). In addition to
the geologic evidence of Toba’s size and atmospheric effects, geneticists
have found evidence from the molecular clocks in our genomes that human
populations went through a genetic bottleneck
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2975862.stm> at about this time.

Not only is there evidence of reduced human populations about 74,000 years
ago, but there are many human-dependent organisms that show the same
pattern. Scientists found a similar genetic bottleneck in the genes of human
lice, and in our gut bacterium Helicobacter pylori, which causes human
ulcers; both of these date back to the time of Toba, according to their
molecular clocks (Rogers, 2004
<http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/10/041005075751.htm> ; Linz et
al., 2007). There is also genetic evidence that a number of other large
mammals, including chimpanzees (Goldberg, 1996), orangutans (Steiper, 2006),
macaques (Hernandez et al., 2007), cheetahs and tigers (Luo et al., 2004),
and gorillas (Thalman et al., 2007) suffered population bottlenecks about
the time of the Toba eruption. Humans themselves in the region around
southeast Asia apparently vanished, because the molecular clocks in the
mitochondrial DNA
<http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/06/090604124023.htm>  shows that
most humans in the region migrated there from Africa shortly after the Toba
event.

The details of the Toba catastrophe theory is still being argued over, but
it is not unreasonable to think that such a global catastrophe would have
profound effects on the human population. It’s startling to realize how
recently the most common ancestors of all modern human populations came to
inhabit most of the Old World, and how quickly the “races” differentiated
over less than 70,000 years. And the Toba story reminds us that no matter
how dominant and destructive humans are now, our existence on this planet is
precarious and fragile. As historian Will Durant put it, “Civilization
exists by geologic consent, subject to change without notice.”


References


*       Ambrose, Stanley H. 1998. Late Pleistocene human population
bottlenecks, volcanic winter, and differentiation of modern humans. Journal
of Human Evolution 34 (6): 623–651.
*       Goldberg, T.L. 1996. Genetics and biogeography of East African
chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii). Harvard University,
unpublished PhD Thesis.
*       Hernandez, R.D.; M.J. Hubisz, D.A. Wheeler, D.G. Smith, B. Ferguson,
D. Ryan, J. Rogers, L. Nazareth, A. Indap, T. Bourquin, J. McPherson, D.
Muzny, R. Gibbs, R. Nielsen, C.D. Bustamante. 2007. Demographic histories
and patterns of linkage disequilibrium in Chinese and Indian Rhesus
macaques. Science (316): 240–243.
*       Linz, B.; et al. 2007. An African origin for the intimate
association between humans and Helicobacter pylori. Nature 445 (7130):
915–8.
*       Luo, S.-J.; J.-H. Kim, W.E. Johnson, J. Van der Walt, J. Martenson,
N. Yuhid, D.G. Miquelle, O. Uphyrkina, J.M. Goodrich, H.B. Quigley, R.
Tilson, G. Brady, P. Martelli, V. Subramaniam, C. McDougal, S. Hean, S.-Q.
Huang, W. Pan, U.K. Karanth, M. Sunquist, J.L.D. Smith, S.J. O’Brien. 2004.
Phylogeography and genetic ancestry of tigers (Panthera tigris). PLoS
Biology (2): 2275–2293.
*       Rampino, Michael R.; Self, Stephen. 1993a. Climate–Volcanism
Feedback and the Toba Eruption of ~74,000 Years ago. Quaternary Research 40:
269–280.
*       Rampino, Michael R.; Self, Stephen. 1993b. Bottleneck in the Human
Evolution and the Toba Eruption. Science 262 (5142): 1955.
*       Robock, A.; Ammann, C.M.; Oman, L.; Shindell, D.; Levis, S.;
Stenchikov, G. 200). Did the Toba Volcanic Eruption of ~74k BP Produce
Widespread Glaciation?. Journal of Geophysical Research 114: D10107,
*       Steiper, M.E. 2006. Population history, biogeography, and taxonomy
of orangutans (Genus: Pongo) based on a population genetic meta-analysis of
multiple loci. Journal of Human Evolution (50): 509–522.
*       Thalman, O.; Fisher, A.; Lankester, F.; Pääbo, S.; Vigilant, L.
2007. The complex history of gorillas: insights from genomic data. Molecular
Biology and Evolution (24): 146–158.

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
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<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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