{
    "href": "/post/2013/01/18/the-climate-issue-you-should-really-be-worried-about-solar-output-variation-and-ice-ages/",
    "relId": "2013/01/18/the-climate-issue-you-should-really-be-worried-about-solar-output-variation-and-ice-ages",
    "title": "The Climate Issues You Should *Really* Be Worried About: Solar Output Variation And Ice Ages",
    "author": "pmjones",
    "markup": "html",
    "tags": [
        {
            "href": "/tag/resilience/",
            "relId": "resilience",
            "title": "Resilience",
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    "created": "2013-01-19 00:53:46 UTC",
    "updated": [
        "2013-01-19 00:53:46 UTC"
    ],
    "html": "<blockquote>\n<p>The average G-type star shows a variability in energy output of around 4%. Our sun is a typical G-type star, yet its observed variability in our brief historical sample is only 1/40th of this. <strong>When or if the Sun returns to more typical variation in energy output, this will dwarf any other climate concerns.</strong></p>\n<p>The emergence of science as a not wholly superstitious and corrupt enterprise is slowly awakening our species to these external dangers. <strong>As the brilliant t-shirt says, an asteroid is nature's way of asking how your space program is doing.</strong> If we are lucky we might have time to build a robust, hardened planetary and extraplanetary hypercivilization able to surmount these challenges. Such a hypercivilization would have to be immeasurably richer and more scientifically advanced to prevent, say, the next Yellowstone supereruption or buffer a 2% drop in the Sun's energy output. <strong>(Indeed, ice ages are the real climate-based ecological disasters and civilization-enders -- think Europe and North America under a mile of ice).</strong> Whether we know it or not, we are in a race to forge such a hypercivilization before these blows fall. If these threats seem too distant, low probability, or fantastical to belong to the \"real\" world, then let them serve as stand-ins for the much larger number of more immediately dire problems whose solutions also depend on rapid progress in science and technology.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Via <a href=\"http://www.edge.org/responses/q2013\">\"2013 : WHAT *SHOULD* WE BE WORRIED ABOUT?\" at Edge.org</a>.There's no direct link to the essay I've quoted; search for the essay title \"Unfriendly Physics, Monsters From The Id, And Self-Organizing Collective Delusions\" on that page.</p>\n"
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