 Some
time ago several people sent me the photo above, of wild horses in an
abandoned area near Chornobyl, on the Ukraine/Belarus border. Animals
in the area after the nuclear plant explosion 22 years ago died
horrible deaths (their thyroids literally disintegrated) but gradually
animals that spend only part of their time in the radioactive zone have
returned and now flourish. Much of the area has been declared a nature
preserve (though the Ukraine proposes to use it as a profitable dump
site for nuclear waste for other countries) and the horses above were
introduced deliberately -- they are not feral animals, but a rare
species (Przewalski's)
that has never been domesticated. Animals in the area are still
radioactive (and would be toxic to eat) but those born with deformities
are apparently being naturally removed from the gene pool.
And
now, in our desperation to keep the unsustainable going, just a little
longer, we are re-embracing nuclear energy as the great hope for
combating global warming. I can only shrug. There is no point arguing
with those who cannot and will not hear.
It occurred to me,
looking at these magnificent animals in this strange, beautiful, poison
place, that this is what the world will look like, in the not too
distant future, when the human species is gone (or reduced to marginal,
harmless numbers on the downside of the bell curve).
And I recalled John Gray's words:
We can dream of a world in which
a greatly reduced human population lives in a partially restored
paradise; in which farming has been abandoned and green deserts given
back to the earth; where the remaining humans are settled in cities,
emulating the noble idleness of hunter-gatherers, their needs met by
new technologies that leave little mark on the Earth; where life is
given over to curiosity, pleasure and play. There is nothing
technically impossible about such a world...A High-tech Green utopia,
in which a few humans live happily in balance with the rest of life, is
scientifically feasible; but it is humanly unimaginable. If anything
like this ever comes about, it will not be through the will of homo rapiens.
It is not of becoming the planet's wise stewards that
Earth-lovers dream, but of a time when humans have ceased to matter.
Homo rapiens
is only one of very many species, and not obviously worth preserving.
Later or sooner, it will become extinct. When it is gone Earth will
recover. Long after the last traces of the human animal have
disappeared, many of the species it is bent on destroying will still be
around, along with others that have yet to spring up. The Earth will
forget mankind. The play of life will go on.
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