this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2024
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[–] SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone 47 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Yeah it's like, human civilization has been around for less than 0.001% of the time it will take for the sun's output to meaningfully change to such a degree that life on earth will become impossible. I think it's more productive to worry about other things first

[–] Zron@lemmy.world 33 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Earth will become uninhabitable way before the sun explodes.

Last estimate I read was like 500 million years before the sun gets hot enough to start negatively effecting the water cycle, and then it just gets dryer and more inhospitable from there.

Of course, we’re artificially making things hotter way faster than that, so probably a few hundred years before large mammals have a hard time maintaining homeostasis due to the temperature.

Maybe we’ll get dinosaurs 2.0 and they’ll have enough time to get smart enough to realize we used all of the cheap energy and doomed them to die on a hot, barren rock.

[–] SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org 13 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Fool. Dinosaurs 2.0 just means more oil, the cycle will repeat and nothing ever changes.

[–] Zron@lemmy.world 13 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Oil is mainly from plants that dyed million of years before dinosaurs even existed, before the bacteria and fungus that break down plants and wood evolved.

That’s why it’s a finite resource. You need all of that organic matter, unbroken by chemical digestion, to be heated and crushed for millions of years.

[–] MutilationWave@lemmy.world 2 points 23 hours ago

Spot on. And before plants we had mushrooms the size of trees covering the land.