2024 Events

Room: Villa V14

West Africa and the Origins of Humankind - A Deep Time Perspective

Conference from the Human Palaeosystems Group
This event will be the first major conference dedicated to exploring human evolution and the deep human past in West Africa. [more]
This talk examines the role winds and currents played in influencing the outline, structure and nature of Western European seaborne empires and the environmental changes that resulted from that contact. [more]

Canaries in a Coal Mine: The Global Decline of Wildlife since 1970

Despite the advent of significant wildlife protection laws since the early 1970s global populations of wildlife have fallen precipitously in the last 50 years. This talk explores why wildlife populations have declined, why wildlife protection laws have proven to be ineffective against and why narratives of successful wildlife protection have persisted despite overall population declines. [more]

Long-term sea-level commitment and reversibility of ice loss from Antarctica

The evolution of the Antarctic Ice Sheet is of vital importance given the coastal and societal implications of ice loss, with a potential to raise sea level by up to 58 m if melted entirely. However, future ice-sheet trajectories remain highly uncertain. In fact, current estimates range from a slight mass gain to a mass loss of the Antarctic Ice Sheet by the end of this century. What is more, due to ice-sheet inertia and potentially self-sustained mass loss when exceeding critical thresholds or tipping points, the bulk of sea-level rise is expected to arise beyond the end of this century as sea-level commitment. Here, we systematically assess this long-term committed sea-level contribution from the Antarctic Ice Sheet in response to warming projected over the next centuries under lower- and higher-emission pathways, as well as the reversibility of the committed large-scale ice-sheet changes when reducing warming to relatively colder climate conditions. [more]

Human evolution of, in and beyond the Anthropocene

Modern ecological crises can be seen as resulting from human social and technological evolution. However, research on human evolution is not sufficiently developed to address global environmental issues or our species’ future on Earth. Theories of human evolution are numerous, poorly integrated, and are fractioned within subdisciplines. Human evolution can be better understood with a set of simple principles from current research in human sociality, cultural evolution, and group interactions. From these I sketch an integrated theory of long-term human evolution that provides a logical and testable pattern of change across the span of our species existence and integrates contrasting theories in anthropology and biology. This theory, and the principles on which it builds, can be used to address our current ecological crises more effectively. I propose a global research agenda of applied cultural evolution for beneficial social change and analyze the example of cultural adaptation to climate change. I review open questions and ethical issues in this line of inquiry. Finally, I issue an urgent call for help in developing applied evolutionary research for addressing human sustainability on our finite planet. [more]
Go to Editor View