Musings

I’m thirsty (really)

dogwood_dead.jpg

A virus has wiped out lots of dogwoods around here, providing food for scavenger species….

Today, the number of people in the world who are highly vulnerable to drought is enormous and growing rapidly, not only in the developing world but also in densely populated areas such as Arizona, California, and southwestern Asia. Judging from the arid cycles of a thousand years ago, the droughts of a warmer future will become more prolonged and harsher. Even without greenhouse gases, the effects of prolonged droughts would be far more catastrophic today than they were even a century ago

That’s from pg. 238 of Brian Fagan‘s latest book, The Great Warming: Climate Change and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations (2008)—and lacks a closing period, just as reproduced here (oops).

But what I really want to say is that Fagan’s books are far superior to publications by Jared Diamond and other non-archaeologists because of the data he marshals and how he analyzes our human past.

Still, I’d bet that the Great Warming in the title was pushed by the marketing people, because Fagan’s message really is that the changing rainfall patterns, with less precip especially in the central, equatorial latitudes, are what will have the biggest effect on human life—not the warming part, although the two facets of the changing climate are definitely linked….

Wild search

pussytoes_flower.jpg

I figured I’d make an end-run around my problem by looking this one up in the actual paper wildflower ID book. But I couldn’t find the book. So, with great trepidation, I googled the name I knew from the dusty, dark recesses of my mind for this botanic sample: pussytoes. Just to be safe, I paired that word with “wildflowers”. Whew! Safe!

And correct! They are known as pussytoes! For the serious minded, the genus is Antennaria, with several species across North America.