User Controls
The lost history of what Americans knew about climate change in the 1960s
-
2024-08-08 at 3:06 AM UTCThe lost history of what Americans knew about climate change in the 1960s
Oreskes knew that scientists had been working to understand how carbon dioxide affected the global climate since the late 19th century. So she set about writing what she thought would be a short paper to correct the record.
In the process, Oreskes, along with other researchers at Harvard and Duke University, uncovered a lost history. As they searched troves of historical documents, they found plenty of other people were concerned about a warming planet, not just scientists, in the years before 1970. “We discovered a universe of discussions by scientists, by members of Congress, by members of the executive branch,” Oreskes said, “and the more we looked, the more we found.” -
2024-08-08 at 3:42 AM UTCWow that's crazy.
-
2024-10-14 at 3:47 PM UTCWow, that's history.
-
2024-10-15 at 3:35 AM UTCWow, that's propaganda.
-
2024-10-15 at 1:38 PM UTCWow, I just found a Werther's original in my desk.
-
2024-10-15 at 2:34 PM UTCWow, so basically global warming was folk science.
-
2024-10-15 at 2:36 PM UTCIf it's LOST history...how do they know about it?
-
2024-10-15 at 4:06 PM UTC
Originally posted by Obbe The lost history of what Americans knew about climate change in the 1960s
lets see the citations please. -
2024-10-15 at 5:08 PM UTC
-
2024-10-15 at 7:55 PM UTCwow that's amazing
-
2024-10-15 at 7:59 PM UTCWow that's stupid
-
2024-10-15 at 8:28 PM UTC
Why has so much of this history been overlooked? Oreskes pointed to the “general historical amnesia of Americans.” As the politician Adlai Stevenson once put it, “The trouble with Americans is that they haven’t read the minutes of the previous meeting.” Even people working in environmental protection seem to have lost track of what happened, Oreskes said, perhaps because the EPA of the 1970s focused its limited attention on the acute pollutants that posed an immediate threat to public health — leaving the previous concern over CO2 tucked away in archives.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean_Air_Act_(United_States)