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What would happen to Earth if humans went extinct?


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What would happen to Earth if humans went extinct?

This city is going green.

This city is going green.
(Image: © Shutterstock)
 

Deep within Guatemala's rainforest sits one of the most famous remnants of the Maya civilization: a roughly 2,000-year-old citadel turned to ruins

 

called Tikal. When Alan Weisman hiked through the surrounding region, he discovered something fascinating along the way: "You're walking through

 

this really dense rainforest, and you're walking over hills," said Weisman, author and journalist. "And the archaeologists are explaining to you that what

 

you're really walking over are pyramids and cities that haven't been excavated."

 

In other words, we know about sites like Tikal because humans have gone to great efforts to dig up and restore their remains. Meanwhile, countless

 

other ruins remain hidden, sealed beneath forest and earth. "It's just amazingly thrilling how fast nature can bury us," Weisman told Live Science.

 

This scene from the rainforest allows us a glimpse of what our planet could look like, if humans simply stopped existing. Lately, that idea has been

 

especially pertinent, as the global COVID-19 pandemic has kept people inside, and emboldened animals to return to our quieter urban environments —

 

giving us a sense of what life might look like if we retreated further into the background. Weisman, who wrote "The World Without Us" (Thomas Dunne

 

Books, 2007), spent several years interviewing experts and systematically investigating this question: What would happen to our planet — to our cities,

 

to our industries, to nature — if humans disappeared?

 

A different kind of skyline

There are several developing theories for what could drive humanity to extinction, and it is unlikely that we'd all simply disappear in an instant.

 

Nevertheless, imagining our sudden and complete eradication from the planet — perhaps by an as-yet undiscovered, human-specific virus, Weisman

 

said — is the most powerful way to explore what could occur if humans left the planet.

 

In Weisman's own research, this question took him firstly into cities, where some of the most dramatic and immediate changes would unfold, thanks to

 

a sudden lack of human maintenance. Without people to run pumps that divert rainfall and rising groundwater, the subways of huge sprawling cities

 

like London and New York would flood within hours of our disappearance, Weisman learned during his research. "[Engineers] have told me that it

 

would take about 36 hours for the subways to flood completely," he said.

 

Lacking human oversight, glitches in oil refineries and nuclear plants would go unchecked, likely resulting in massive fires, nuclear explosions and

 

devastating nuclear fallout. "There's going to be a gush of radiation if suddenly we disappear. And that's a real wildcard, it's almost impossible to

 

predict what that's going to do," Weisman said. Similarly, in the wake of our demise, we'd leave behind mountains of waste — much of it plastic, which

 

would likely persist for thousands of years, with effects on wildlife that we are only now beginning to understand.

 

Meanwhile, petroleum waste that spills or seeps into the ground at industrial sites and factories would be broken down and reused by microbes and

 

plants, which would probably take decades. Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) — human-made chemicals such as PCBs that currently can’t be broken

 

down in nature — would take much longer, Weisman says. "Some of these POPs may be around until the end of time on Earth. In time, however, they

 

will be safely buried away." The combined rapid and slow release of all the polluting waste we leave behind would undoubtedly have damaging effects

 

on surrounding habitats and wildlife. (But that doesn't necessarily mean total destruction: We need only look at the rebounding of wildlife at the site of

 

the Chernobyl nuclear disaster to understand that nature can be resilient on short timescales, even under such extremes.)

 

While that polluting legacy unfolds, water running underground in cities would corrode the metal structures that hold up the streets above

 

subterranean transport systems, and whole avenues would collapse, transformed suddenly into mid-city rivers, Weisman explained. Over successive

 

winters, without humans to do regular de-icing, pavements would crack, providing new niches for seeds to take root — carried on the wind and

 

excreted by overflying birds — and develop into trees that continue the gradual dismemberment of pavements and roads. The same would happen to

 

bridges, without humans there to weed out rogue saplings taking root between the steel rivets: coupled with general degradation, this could dismantle

 

these structures within a few hundred years.

 

With all this fresh new habitat opening up, nature would stoically march in, pasting over the formerly concrete jungle with grasslands, shrubbery and

 

dense stands of trees. That would cause the accumulation of dry organic material, such as leaves and twigs — providing the perfect fodder for fires

 

sparked by lightning, which would go roaring through the maze of buildings and streets, potentially razing whole parts of cities to the ground. "Fires are

 

going to create a lot of charred material that will fall to the street, which is going to be terrific for nurturing biological life. The streets will convert to little

 

grasslands and forests growing up within 500 years," as Weisman tells it.

 

Over hundreds of years, as buildings are subjected to sustained damage from erosion and fire, they would degrade, he said. The first to topple would

 

be modern glass and metal structures that would shatter and rust. But tellingly, "buildings that will last the longest are the ones made out of the Earth

 

itself" — like stone structures, Wesiman added. Even those would become a softened version of their former selves: eventually the defined, iconic

 

skylines we know so well today would be no more.

 

Where the wild things are

 

Looking beyond the city limits to the great swathes of farmland that currently cover half of Earth's habitable land, there would be a swift recovery of

 

insects, as the application of pesticides and other chemicals ceases with humanity's demise. "That's going to start a real cascade of events," Weisman

 

said. "Once the insects are doing better, then the plants are going to do much better, then the birds." Surrounding habitats — plant communities, soils,

 

waterways and oceans — will recover, free from the far-reaching influence that chemicals have on ecosystems today. That, in turn, will encourage more

 

wildlife to move in and take up residence.

 

This transition will precipitate an increase in biodiversity on a global scale. Researchers who have modeled the diversity of megafauna — the likes of

 

lions, elephants, tigers, rhinoceroses and bears — across the planet have revealed that the world used to be exceptionally rich in these species. But

 

that changed when humans began to spread across the planet, hunting these animals and invading their habitats.  As humans migrated out of Africa

 

and Eurasia to other parts of the globe, "we see a consistent increase in extinction rates following the arrival of humans," explained Søren Faurby, a

 

lecturer in macroecology and macroevolution at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden. "In Australia, there is an increase in extinction near 60,000

 

years ago. In North and South America, an increase is seen [about] 15,000 years ago, and in Madagascar and the Caribbean islands a drastic increase is

 

seen a few thousand years ago."

 

Without humans spreading to the far corners of the Earth and driving down megafauna populations, the entire planet could have been as diverse in

 

these species as the famed Serengeti in East Africa is today, Faurby told Live Science. "Effectively, there used to be large animals everywhere, and there

 

would be large animals everywhere around the globe without human involvement." His research has revealed that without humanity's heavy species

 

impact, the central United States, and parts of South America, would be the most megafauna-rich places on Earth today. Animals like elephants would

 

be a common sight in the Mediterranean Islands. There would even be rhinoceroses across most of northern Europe.

 

 

Without humans, could Earth reclaim that diversity? Even if we did suddenly disappear from the picture, it would still take millions of years for the

 

planet to recover from those past extinctions, Faurby and his colleagues have calculated. They investigated what it would take to return to a baseline

 

level of species richness and a distribution of large-bodied animals across the planet that mirrors what we had before modern humans fanned out

 

across the globe. They estimate it would take "somewhere between 3 and up to 7 million or more years to get back to the pre-extinction baseline,"

 

explained Jens-Christian Svenning, a professor of macroecology and biogeography at Aarhus University in Denmark, and a colleague of Faurby's who

 

has worked on the same body of research. 

 

Basically, "if there weren't human impacts, the whole world would be one big wilderness," Svenning told Live Science. 

Nature finds a way

 

The planet might eventually become lusher and more diverse — but we can't dismiss the effects of climate change, arguably humanity's most indelible

 

impact on the planet. Weisman notes the inherent uncertainty in making useful predictions about what will unfold. For instance, if there are explosions

 

at industrial plants, or oil or gas wellheads that continue to burn long after we're all gone, huge amounts of heat-trapping carbon dioxide would

 

continue to be discharged into the atmosphere, he explained. 

 

 

Carbon dioxide doesn't stay suspended in the atmosphere forever: Our oceans play an essential role in absorbing vast amounts of carbon dioxide from

 

the air. But there are still limits to how much of it the ocean can take up without its own waters acidifying to unhealthy levels — potentially to the

 

detriment of thousands of marine species. There's also a cap on how much the sea can physically absorb, meaning it isn't simply the bottomless carbon

 

sink it's often thought to be. 

 

As it stands, current levels of CO2 in our atmosphere will already take thousands of years to be fully removed from the atmosphere. (Based on the

 

research he did for his own book, Weisman found it could take upwards of 100,000 years.) And if the sea reaches its cap and more greenhouse gases

 

stay suspended up in the atmosphere, the resulting continuous warming will lead to further melting of the polar ice caps, and the release of even more

 

greenhouse gases from softening permafrost. This will cycle into an ongoing, climate-altering, feedback loop. All this means that we can confidently

 

assume that climate change's impacts will last long after we leave. 

 

 

But to this, Weisman offered a word of hope. During the Jurassic period, he said, there was five times as much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere as

 

there is today, which led to a dramatic increase in ocean acidity. Evidently, however, there must have been marine species that coped with these

 

extremes, and went on to evolve and be part of the planet we know today. Which is to say that ultimately, despite climate extremes and the immense

 

losses they can incur, "nature always finds a way," Weisman said. 

 

There might one day be a world without humans, but that won't stop the rest of the planet from soldiering on.

 

Moving forward

Is there any point in us pondering what our planet will look like, without us here? Well, on the one hand, we might simply take comfort in the

 

knowledge that, free of people, our planet would ultimately be fine, as Weisman said. In fact, it would ultimately thrive. 

 

But taking a glimpse at this imagined future might also prompt us to be more mindful of our actions, in a bid to preserve our own spot on the planet,

 

too. Weisman sees an inherent value to visualizing a world without us, which is why he decided to write his book in the first place. He explained that

 

when he started out, he was conscious that many people avoid environmental stories because it makes them feel bad about the damage that humans

 

are doing to the planet, and how in turn, that's hastening our own demise. "I found out a way to get rid of the fear factor was just to kill [humans] off

 

first," he said, with humor. 

 

With that distraction gone, he found, he could focus people's attention on the planet, and the real point he wanted to make: "I wanted people to see

 

how beautifully nature could come back, and even heal a lot of the scars that we've placed on this planet. Then to think, is there possibly a way to add

 

ourselves back into this picture of a restored Earth?"

 

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