1 |
DENIED
|
ROLE_USER
|
null |
|
Show voter details
|
2 |
DENIED
|
moderate
|
App\Entity\Entry {#1430
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1653 …}
+image: null
+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#1645 …}
+slug: "Sanity-check-is-rsyncing-to-a-remote-computer-that-has"
+title: "Sanity check - is rsyncing to a remote computer that has zfs snapshotting an okay way to back things up?"
+url: null
+body: """
I currently have two computers, one that has a big zfs raidz pool that I currently back everything up to. Right now, on my local computer I use `rsnapshot` to do snapshot backups via rsync to the remote zfs pool. I know I’m wasting a ton of space because I have snapshotting in the rsync backup, and then the zfs pool is snapshotted every day.\n
\n
Does it make sense to just do a regular `rsync` into a backup directory on the zfs pool and then just rely on the zfs pool snapshotting for snapshotting?\n
\n
Maybe eventually I will put the local machine on zfs and then just send the local zfs snapshots over, but that will take some time. Thanks!
"""
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date: 2024-10-22 07:17:23.0 +02:00
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+image: null
+parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#2468 …}
+root: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#2468 …}
+body: """
This is fantastically helpful, thank you. I will do this.\n
\n
I don’t know why I thought sending zfs snapshots was the better option
"""
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date: 2024-01-29 22:49:48.0 +01:00
}
} |
|
Show voter details
|
3 |
DENIED
|
edit
|
App\Entity\Entry {#1430
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1653 …}
+image: null
+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#1645 …}
+slug: "Sanity-check-is-rsyncing-to-a-remote-computer-that-has"
+title: "Sanity check - is rsyncing to a remote computer that has zfs snapshotting an okay way to back things up?"
+url: null
+body: """
I currently have two computers, one that has a big zfs raidz pool that I currently back everything up to. Right now, on my local computer I use `rsnapshot` to do snapshot backups via rsync to the remote zfs pool. I know I’m wasting a ton of space because I have snapshotting in the rsync backup, and then the zfs pool is snapshotted every day.\n
\n
Does it make sense to just do a regular `rsync` into a backup directory on the zfs pool and then just rely on the zfs pool snapshotting for snapshotting?\n
\n
Maybe eventually I will put the local machine on zfs and then just send the local zfs snapshots over, but that will take some time. Thanks!
"""
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+image: null
+parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#2468 …}
+root: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#2468 …}
+body: """
This is fantastically helpful, thank you. I will do this.\n
\n
I don’t know why I thought sending zfs snapshots was the better option
"""
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date: 2024-01-29 23:55:01.0 +01:00
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date: 2024-01-29 22:49:48.0 +01:00
}
} |
|
Show voter details
|
4 |
DENIED
|
moderate
|
App\Entity\Entry {#1430
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1653 …}
+image: null
+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#1645 …}
+slug: "Sanity-check-is-rsyncing-to-a-remote-computer-that-has"
+title: "Sanity check - is rsyncing to a remote computer that has zfs snapshotting an okay way to back things up?"
+url: null
+body: """
I currently have two computers, one that has a big zfs raidz pool that I currently back everything up to. Right now, on my local computer I use `rsnapshot` to do snapshot backups via rsync to the remote zfs pool. I know I’m wasting a ton of space because I have snapshotting in the rsync backup, and then the zfs pool is snapshotted every day.\n
\n
Does it make sense to just do a regular `rsync` into a backup directory on the zfs pool and then just rely on the zfs pool snapshotting for snapshotting?\n
\n
Maybe eventually I will put the local machine on zfs and then just send the local zfs snapshots over, but that will take some time. Thanks!
"""
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date: 2024-10-22 07:17:23.0 +02:00
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+image: null
+parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#2468 …}
+root: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#2468 …}
+body: """
This is fantastically helpful, thank you. I will do this.\n
\n
I don’t know why I thought sending zfs snapshots was the better option
"""
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date: 2024-01-29 23:55:01.0 +01:00
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date: 2024-01-29 22:49:48.0 +01:00
}
} |
|
Show voter details
|
5 |
DENIED
|
ROLE_USER
|
null |
|
Show voter details
|
6 |
DENIED
|
moderate
|
App\Entity\EntryComment {#2470
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+entry: App\Entity\Entry {#1430
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1653 …}
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+slug: "Sanity-check-is-rsyncing-to-a-remote-computer-that-has"
+title: "Sanity check - is rsyncing to a remote computer that has zfs snapshotting an okay way to back things up?"
+url: null
+body: """
I currently have two computers, one that has a big zfs raidz pool that I currently back everything up to. Right now, on my local computer I use `rsnapshot` to do snapshot backups via rsync to the remote zfs pool. I know I’m wasting a ton of space because I have snapshotting in the rsync backup, and then the zfs pool is snapshotted every day.\n
\n
Does it make sense to just do a regular `rsync` into a backup directory on the zfs pool and then just rely on the zfs pool snapshotting for snapshotting?\n
\n
Maybe eventually I will put the local machine on zfs and then just send the local zfs snapshots over, but that will take some time. Thanks!
"""
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date: 2024-01-29 22:49:48.0 +01:00
}
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+body: """
This is fantastically helpful, thank you. I will do this.\n
\n
I don’t know why I thought sending zfs snapshots was the better option
"""
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+favouriteCount: 1
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+lastActive: DateTime @1706568901 {#2467
date: 2024-01-29 23:55:01.0 +01:00
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"@abies_exarchia@lemm.ee"
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date: 2024-01-29 23:55:01.0 +01:00
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+"title": 351092
} |
|
Show voter details
|
7 |
DENIED
|
edit
|
App\Entity\EntryComment {#2470
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+entry: App\Entity\Entry {#1430
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1653 …}
+image: null
+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#1645 …}
+slug: "Sanity-check-is-rsyncing-to-a-remote-computer-that-has"
+title: "Sanity check - is rsyncing to a remote computer that has zfs snapshotting an okay way to back things up?"
+url: null
+body: """
I currently have two computers, one that has a big zfs raidz pool that I currently back everything up to. Right now, on my local computer I use `rsnapshot` to do snapshot backups via rsync to the remote zfs pool. I know I’m wasting a ton of space because I have snapshotting in the rsync backup, and then the zfs pool is snapshotted every day.\n
\n
Does it make sense to just do a regular `rsync` into a backup directory on the zfs pool and then just rely on the zfs pool snapshotting for snapshotting?\n
\n
Maybe eventually I will put the local machine on zfs and then just send the local zfs snapshots over, but that will take some time. Thanks!
"""
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date: 2024-01-29 22:49:48.0 +01:00
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}
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+body: """
This is fantastically helpful, thank you. I will do this.\n
\n
I don’t know why I thought sending zfs snapshots was the better option
"""
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+favouriteCount: 1
+score: 0
+lastActive: DateTime @1706568901 {#2467
date: 2024-01-29 23:55:01.0 +01:00
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"@abies_exarchia@lemm.ee"
"@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca"
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+createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1706568901 {#2469
date: 2024-01-29 23:55:01.0 +01:00
}
+"title": 351092
} |
|
Show voter details
|
8 |
DENIED
|
moderate
|
App\Entity\EntryComment {#2470
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+entry: App\Entity\Entry {#1430
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1653 …}
+image: null
+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#1645 …}
+slug: "Sanity-check-is-rsyncing-to-a-remote-computer-that-has"
+title: "Sanity check - is rsyncing to a remote computer that has zfs snapshotting an okay way to back things up?"
+url: null
+body: """
I currently have two computers, one that has a big zfs raidz pool that I currently back everything up to. Right now, on my local computer I use `rsnapshot` to do snapshot backups via rsync to the remote zfs pool. I know I’m wasting a ton of space because I have snapshotting in the rsync backup, and then the zfs pool is snapshotted every day.\n
\n
Does it make sense to just do a regular `rsync` into a backup directory on the zfs pool and then just rely on the zfs pool snapshotting for snapshotting?\n
\n
Maybe eventually I will put the local machine on zfs and then just send the local zfs snapshots over, but that will take some time. Thanks!
"""
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date: 2024-01-29 22:49:48.0 +01:00
}
}
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+body: """
This is fantastically helpful, thank you. I will do this.\n
\n
I don’t know why I thought sending zfs snapshots was the better option
"""
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date: 2024-01-29 23:55:01.0 +01:00
}
+"title": 351092
} |
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Show voter details
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9 |
DENIED
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ROLE_USER
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null |
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Show voter details
|
10 |
DENIED
|
moderate
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Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1720
+user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2040 …}
+magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1718 …}
+image: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Image {#2324 …}
+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2323 …}
+slug: "People-not-the-climate-found-to-have-caused-the-decline"
+title: "People, not the climate, found to have caused the decline of the giant mammals"
+url: "https://phys.org/news/2023-12-people-climate-decline-giant-mammals.html"
+body: """
For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
\n
About 100,000 years ago, the first modern humans migrated out of Africa in large numbers. They were eminent at adapting to new habitats, and they settled in virtually every kind of landscape—from deserts to jungles to the icy taiga in the far north.\n
\n
Part of the success was human’s ability to hunt large animals. With clever hunting techniques and specially built weapons, they perfected the art of killing even the most dangerous mammals.\n
\n
But unfortunately, the great success of our ancestors came at the expense of the other large mammals.\n
\n
It is well-known that numerous large species went extinct during the time of worldwide colonization by modern humans. Now, new research from Aarhus University reveals that those large mammals that survived also experienced a dramatic decline.
"""
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+body: "I’ve been thinking about this a lot recently. I don’t think this finding suggests that humans are innately negative forces in ecosystems, but rather that becoming indigenous to a place is a process. As people spread out to new areas, they didn’t have cultural practices that maintained historical ecological relations, and upended some of the ecology in the new places. But over time, it’s in everyone’s best interest to maintain relatively sustainable and cyclical ecological relations for long term survivalship, and that becomes part of the culture and stories, and then you get indigeneity. I think there’s no coincidence that the megafauna that still exists is primarily in the area where humans evolved (subsaharan africa). This is where people have been indigenous to the longest, perhaps before people had the means to extirpate megafauna. And once the cultural indigeneity was in place, there were reasons to not destroy megafauna populations (until the modern colonial era, at least)"
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date: 2023-12-14 21:10:07.0 +01:00
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}
0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#2463
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+entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1720 …2}
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+parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#2385 …}
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+body: "Yeah i think you have a point but I also think humans were moral agents and ascribed value to each other and their environment long long before the advent of science"
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date: 2023-12-15 23:42:00.0 +01:00
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date: 2023-12-14 19:08:08.0 +01:00
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…2
} |
|
Show voter details
|
11 |
DENIED
|
edit
|
Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1720
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+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2323 …}
+slug: "People-not-the-climate-found-to-have-caused-the-decline"
+title: "People, not the climate, found to have caused the decline of the giant mammals"
+url: "https://phys.org/news/2023-12-people-climate-decline-giant-mammals.html"
+body: """
For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
\n
About 100,000 years ago, the first modern humans migrated out of Africa in large numbers. They were eminent at adapting to new habitats, and they settled in virtually every kind of landscape—from deserts to jungles to the icy taiga in the far north.\n
\n
Part of the success was human’s ability to hunt large animals. With clever hunting techniques and specially built weapons, they perfected the art of killing even the most dangerous mammals.\n
\n
But unfortunately, the great success of our ancestors came at the expense of the other large mammals.\n
\n
It is well-known that numerous large species went extinct during the time of worldwide colonization by modern humans. Now, new research from Aarhus University reveals that those large mammals that survived also experienced a dramatic decline.
"""
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+body: "I’ve been thinking about this a lot recently. I don’t think this finding suggests that humans are innately negative forces in ecosystems, but rather that becoming indigenous to a place is a process. As people spread out to new areas, they didn’t have cultural practices that maintained historical ecological relations, and upended some of the ecology in the new places. But over time, it’s in everyone’s best interest to maintain relatively sustainable and cyclical ecological relations for long term survivalship, and that becomes part of the culture and stories, and then you get indigeneity. I think there’s no coincidence that the megafauna that still exists is primarily in the area where humans evolved (subsaharan africa). This is where people have been indigenous to the longest, perhaps before people had the means to extirpate megafauna. And once the cultural indigeneity was in place, there were reasons to not destroy megafauna populations (until the modern colonial era, at least)"
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}
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date: 2023-12-14 19:08:08.0 +01:00
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…2
} |
|
Show voter details
|
12 |
DENIED
|
moderate
|
Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1720
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+slug: "People-not-the-climate-found-to-have-caused-the-decline"
+title: "People, not the climate, found to have caused the decline of the giant mammals"
+url: "https://phys.org/news/2023-12-people-climate-decline-giant-mammals.html"
+body: """
For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
\n
About 100,000 years ago, the first modern humans migrated out of Africa in large numbers. They were eminent at adapting to new habitats, and they settled in virtually every kind of landscape—from deserts to jungles to the icy taiga in the far north.\n
\n
Part of the success was human’s ability to hunt large animals. With clever hunting techniques and specially built weapons, they perfected the art of killing even the most dangerous mammals.\n
\n
But unfortunately, the great success of our ancestors came at the expense of the other large mammals.\n
\n
It is well-known that numerous large species went extinct during the time of worldwide colonization by modern humans. Now, new research from Aarhus University reveals that those large mammals that survived also experienced a dramatic decline.
"""
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For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
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Show voter details
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15 |
DENIED
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App\Entity\EntryComment {#1555
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For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
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About 100,000 years ago, the first modern humans migrated out of Africa in large numbers. They were eminent at adapting to new habitats, and they settled in virtually every kind of landscape—from deserts to jungles to the icy taiga in the far north.\n
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Show voter details
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16 |
DENIED
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moderate
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App\Entity\EntryComment {#1555
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For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
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It is well-known that numerous large species went extinct during the time of worldwide colonization by modern humans. Now, new research from Aarhus University reveals that those large mammals that survived also experienced a dramatic decline.
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For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
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About 100,000 years ago, the first modern humans migrated out of Africa in large numbers. They were eminent at adapting to new habitats, and they settled in virtually every kind of landscape—from deserts to jungles to the icy taiga in the far north.\n
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Part of the success was human’s ability to hunt large animals. With clever hunting techniques and specially built weapons, they perfected the art of killing even the most dangerous mammals.\n
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But unfortunately, the great success of our ancestors came at the expense of the other large mammals.\n
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It is well-known that numerous large species went extinct during the time of worldwide colonization by modern humans. Now, new research from Aarhus University reveals that those large mammals that survived also experienced a dramatic decline.
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For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
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About 100,000 years ago, the first modern humans migrated out of Africa in large numbers. They were eminent at adapting to new habitats, and they settled in virtually every kind of landscape—from deserts to jungles to the icy taiga in the far north.\n
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date: 2023-12-15 23:42:00.0 +01:00
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20 |
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moderate
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App\Entity\EntryComment {#2463
+user: App\Entity\User {#261 …}
+entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1720
+user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2040 …}
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+image: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Image {#2324 …}
+domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2323 …}
+slug: "People-not-the-climate-found-to-have-caused-the-decline"
+title: "People, not the climate, found to have caused the decline of the giant mammals"
+url: "https://phys.org/news/2023-12-people-climate-decline-giant-mammals.html"
+body: """
For years, scientists have debated whether humans or the climate have caused the population of large mammals to decline dramatically over the past several thousand years. A new study from Aarhus University confirms that climate cannot be the explanation.\n
\n
About 100,000 years ago, the first modern humans migrated out of Africa in large numbers. They were eminent at adapting to new habitats, and they settled in virtually every kind of landscape—from deserts to jungles to the icy taiga in the far north.\n
\n
Part of the success was human’s ability to hunt large animals. With clever hunting techniques and specially built weapons, they perfected the art of killing even the most dangerous mammals.\n
\n
But unfortunately, the great success of our ancestors came at the expense of the other large mammals.\n
\n
It is well-known that numerous large species went extinct during the time of worldwide colonization by modern humans. Now, new research from Aarhus University reveals that those large mammals that survived also experienced a dramatic decline.
"""
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date: 2023-12-16 01:22:55.0 +01:00
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+image: null
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+body: "I’ve been thinking about this a lot recently. I don’t think this finding suggests that humans are innately negative forces in ecosystems, but rather that becoming indigenous to a place is a process. As people spread out to new areas, they didn’t have cultural practices that maintained historical ecological relations, and upended some of the ecology in the new places. But over time, it’s in everyone’s best interest to maintain relatively sustainable and cyclical ecological relations for long term survivalship, and that becomes part of the culture and stories, and then you get indigeneity. I think there’s no coincidence that the megafauna that still exists is primarily in the area where humans evolved (subsaharan africa). This is where people have been indigenous to the longest, perhaps before people had the means to extirpate megafauna. And once the cultural indigeneity was in place, there were reasons to not destroy megafauna populations (until the modern colonial era, at least)"
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date: 2023-12-14 21:10:07.0 +01:00
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+"title": 222214
}
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date: 2023-12-14 19:08:08.0 +01:00
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…2
}
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+body: "Yeah i think you have a point but I also think humans were moral agents and ascribed value to each other and their environment long long before the advent of science"
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-id: 225801
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+createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1702680120 {#2464
date: 2023-12-15 23:42:00.0 +01:00
}
+"title": 225801
} |
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