Blackspot

Seismic Revolt

Nature is about to shake things up.

There was something left unsaid in all the coverage about the powerful earthquakes that decimated Haiti in January and rattled Chile in February. Of course, we heard about the tragedy – the human tolls were covered in detail and made us acutely aware of our own vulnerability. But despite all that, no one wanted to discuss what caused these earthquakes. In an age where the materialist-scientific outlook peers into every dark corner of existence, leaving such an obvious question unasked suggests we can’t handle the answer.

It is time to confront the fact that climate change will manifest in unexpected ways, including violent earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanoes. This is the position of respected scientists. As the New Scientist magazine reports without equivocation, “evidence of a link between climate and the rumblings of the crust has been around for years, but only now is it becoming clear just how sensitive rock can be to the air, ice and water above.” Or as Bill McGuire, Professor of Geological Hazards at University College London, writes in an earlier New Scientist article, “as the balance changes between the stresses acting on the crust and the strains held within it, the result can be an increase in volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.” Within the scientific community there appears to be a long-standing belief that there is a direct, causal connection linking earthquakes to climate change.

This connection is not being discussed because our civilization is unwilling to accept the full-spectrum reality of nature’s revolt. We are like the naive soldiers who came to battle prepared for trench warfare only to find their enemies armed with airplanes. We think of climate change as “global warming” alone and prepare ourselves psychically for delayed seasons while nature hits us from below – literally – with an earth-splitting seismic revolt. And as we scramble to amass the public funds necessary for retrofitting our decaying industrial infrastructure, nature will deploy volcanic ash to block out the sun and mysterious blights to erase our crops.

Nature is in revolt against our consumer culture. The only chance we have as a species is to heed its warnings, to trust that these sudden catastrophes augur a dark future that our governments, our money and our faith in progress cannot protect us from. Nature is the source of our sustenance and may easily become the cause of our death. Unless, that is, we are willing to risk joining nature’s earthly insurrection.

Micah White is a contributing editor at Adbusters and an independent activist. He is writing a book on the future of activism. www.micahmwhite.com or micah (at) adbusters.org

56 comments on the article “Seismic Revolt”

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DH

The article just seemed sci-fi enough to say that. I had no idea that climate change could actually affect tectonics. I'm still having trouble trying to figure out how it would work.

DH

The article just seemed sci-fi enough to say that. I had no idea that climate change could actually affect tectonics. I'm still having trouble trying to figure out how it would work.

Anonymous

Just because you are having trouble with figuring it out, it is not 'mad' or not true..It just you not seeing it yet.

Anonymous

Just because you are having trouble with figuring it out, it is not 'mad' or not true..It just you not seeing it yet.

Kurt Hilton

Perhaps it is because the science of it is not explained in the article. There is only a random quote by a random scientist to back the statement: Global Warming causes earthquakes.

From my understanding, earthquakes are caused by the giant rocks floating on a sea of moving magma we call continental shelves, bumping into each other and scraping by each other. It is not oil deposits lubricating the ground but forces at work deep below the crust which would be completely unaffected by the relatively thin atmosphere.

This makes the statement that Nature is rebelling against consumer culture, rediculous. In geologic time, our existence as a species has gone by in a fraction of a second. Gigantic rock sheets crash against each other, and what was there is destroyed. Nothing more can be said about it, espeicially since we dont have the technology to affect what happens below the crust.

Kurt Hilton

Perhaps it is because the science of it is not explained in the article. There is only a random quote by a random scientist to back the statement: Global Warming causes earthquakes.

From my understanding, earthquakes are caused by the giant rocks floating on a sea of moving magma we call continental shelves, bumping into each other and scraping by each other. It is not oil deposits lubricating the ground but forces at work deep below the crust which would be completely unaffected by the relatively thin atmosphere.

This makes the statement that Nature is rebelling against consumer culture, rediculous. In geologic time, our existence as a species has gone by in a fraction of a second. Gigantic rock sheets crash against each other, and what was there is destroyed. Nothing more can be said about it, espeicially since we dont have the technology to affect what happens below the crust.

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