Where the world wakes up to good news!
Good News

Top Picks

Log In | Angels Among Us | Blogs | Books & Movies | Business | Current Events/Politics
Health | Family | Inspirational | Money | Music | Pets | Sports | Travel | Tell-A-Friend | Home

Signup to Add News

Search For Ebooks:

Remote Terrestrial time to come
by Ari Goldfarb
Send Feedback to Ari Goldfarb

We frequently discuss letting nature back into the modern urban centers, but what happens if we look at this process over a far larger timescale-say,over the course of l00 million years?

Geologist and popular-science writer Jan Siewicz explores the extremely distant terrestrial future in his poetic and thoroughly stimulating new book The Earth After Us. Siewicz is refreshingly blunt in his assessment of humankind's chances of long-term preservation. "The surface of the future Earth," he writes, "one hundred million years from now, will not have preserved evidence of contemporary human activity.

Fair enough. He adds, however, that in that distant era-as far from the present as we are now from the dinosaurs-there will still be subtle proof that humans once walked the earth. After all, some of our cities will actually fossilize. Siewicz explained the basics to Dwell: "I think we have a good idea,at least for the short to medium term,which cities have a chance of being fossilized," he begins. That is because we have a reasonable idea of which bits of the Earth's crust are sinking and which bits are going up-and those cities being carried upward by plate tectonics will be eroded. No part of them will survive." San Francisco and Los Angeles, that is, will be erased. entirely, and those cities getting pushed down? "Once a city is buried and beneath the reach of waves, the process of fossilization will begin," Siewicz says. He suggests that cities close to coasts and slow rivers will, sooner or later, be buried, and it is burial that allows for fossilization.

Cities like New Orleans, Hanoi,Shanghai, Venice,and Amsterdam might thus survive "at least for a few million years into the future." As he writes in The Earth After Us, "Our drowned cities and fanns, highways and towns, would begin to be covered with sand,silt, and mud, and take the first steps toward becaming geology." Next time you are out walking across our many roads and parking lots, through shopping malls and homes, it might be worth taking a second look: All of this might yet be squeezed thin into some strange new sandstone and transformed into a permanent part of the future Earth. Ari has been writing articles for nearly 4 years. Come visit his latest website over at http://zeroturnlawnmowers.info which helps people find the best Zero Turn Lawn Mowers and information they are looking for Lawn Mowers.

Keywords: Interior Design, Conserving, Architectural Monuments,Terrestrial Possible Future

About the Author
Ari Goldfarb,
arigoldfarb@gmail.com
Learn more at

This article has been viewed 3 time(s).


Good Morning Planet Earth is a positive news source for those who seek an alternative to mainstream
news and current events - it's a positive spin on world events.

Disclaimer: We realize that "Good News" to some people may be "Bad News" to others. For example, conservatives and liberals can see the same piece of news in opposite ways. This site is a free forum, and we seek to police it as little as possible. We encourage all to submit their news in as positive a light as possible. Please understand that the views expressed on this site are those of the individual authors and not necessarily of the owners and operators of this site.

Spread the Good News! Tell-A-Friend

www.GoodMorningPlanetEarth.com is a project of CES Business Consultants,
the creators of www.IdeaMarketers.com