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Extra: Highlights of Humanity

As "Three Body Problems" says, plants, animals and bacteria all play an important role in the composition of the atmosphere.

Without life, the current atmosphere may not be able to block ultraviolet rays and solar wind, and the oceans will evaporate. The earth's atmosphere will first become a steamer like Venus. Water vapor will evaporate from the top of the atmosphere into space. In a few billion years, the earth will be dry.

The current earth is a home that life has built for itself and has nothing to do with God.

In view of the public discharge of nuclear wastewater today, I may be worried a little too much.

After all, the ocean is the largest ecosystem on earth.

The earth's billions of years of life history, all climate anomalies, and all mass extinctions of organisms all started in the ocean.

3.5 billion years ago, the entire world's atmosphere consisted of nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and methane.

A group of algae mutates and can convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, directly leading to the transformation of the earth.

Kills nearly all anaerobic life in the world, transforming the planet into an oxidized version.

Although this gave rise to the complex world of oxidizing organisms, it was a complete disaster for the entire anaerobic ecosystem at that time.

This can be called an earth-shaking change, but some algae have undergone a slight mutation and cyanobactin has appeared.

440 million years ago, the end of the Ordovician mass extinction.

85% of species became extinct, mainly early fish and molluscs.

The mainstream cause is a gamma ray burst that happened to hit the earth, destroying one-third of the earth's ozone layer, causing ultraviolet rays to directly illuminate the earth.

Most marine life died, combined with the destruction of ozone and changes in atmospheric composition, creating a large amount of toxic nitrogen dioxide.

Poison does not matter, but this is a strong greenhouse gas that caused the world to enter a huge ice freeze and froze to death a large number of living things.

The Devonian mass extinction 365 million years ago.

78% of marine species have become extinct, and the culprit can be determined to be magma.

A large amount of magma spewed out from the Siberian region, overwhelming the sky, causing the seawater temperature and acidity to rise significantly, and pollutants gradually diffused into the atmosphere.

Most of them are greenhouse gases, and plants also accelerate their decay, forming the earth's earliest soil.

The soil was washed out to sea, becoming the largest breeding ground for algae, and the oxygen content of the ocean was greatly reduced.

This series of disasters is caused by extreme climates that alternate between hot and cold and millions of years of long nights, coupled with a large amount of toxic gases and oxygen-depleted seawater. All factors are added together to plunge the earth into a vast night.

The culprit was magma, but what really made the extinction so dramatic was algae.

The Permian mass extinction 250 million years ago.

This was the most severe mass extinction in the history of the Earth that we now know, resulting in the disappearance of 95% of species. It can be said to be a complete renewal of species on earth.

The cause is unknown, but the mainstream theory is that large-scale volcanic eruptions and plate movements cause climate change.

And what can cause extremely drastic climate changes will still only be marine biota.

The Triassic mass extinction 200 million years ago led to the rise of dinosaurs.

The cause is still magma, and the killer is algae, which leads to abnormal climate.

The largest group of organisms in the ocean is algae, which are also the lowest producers.

The change in the living environment of algae is like the GM rolling a test dice on the earth's biosphere.

Whether it is flooding or decreasing, it will affect the climate and water quality.

If a 'big failure' is thrown, the earth will be directly changed.

Finally, the most familiar is the mass extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.

There are many reasons for this, including asteroid impacts and climate change.

But no matter what it is, the oxygen content has dropped sharply to the current 20%.

Mammals and flowering plants have emerged in this era, but that's all. If the oxygen content increases or decreases again, it will be a disaster that cannot be solved by human technology.

It's not much better than the powerlessness of dinosaurs.

Tens of thousands of years ago, as primitive humans migrated around the world, species extinction occurred again.

This time it was quiet, without magma eruptions, gamma rays and other spectacular sights, but the degree of completeness and the short duration of its extinction are probably unmatched by the previous five times.

Because living things are the biggest engineers that change the earth.

Living things are the killers of most living things.

Humans use fire and tools and create many things that are rare in nature. Especially after the industrial revolution, the destruction of biological habitats has been huge.

I don't care if seafood is edible or not, I don't like it anyway.

Under the water cycle, the pollution of fresh water is worthy of concern, but objectively, human technology can still purify water.

However, even if human technology develops for another thousand years, there will be nothing we can do about changes in atmospheric composition and abnormal climate changes.

That was true despair, just watching.

The thing that changes the climate the most is the sun, and the thing that changes the climate the most is algae.

Seventy percent of the world's oxygen is provided by algae.

The biggest impact on the living environment of algae is ocean currents...

I watched a video demonstrating the impact of nuclear contaminated water dispersing with ocean currents.

From a macro level, it doesn't matter which countries it spreads to. Nuclear contamination is in the ocean currents, which is important.

Because it must ultimately have a global impact, and ‘country’ is not the basic unit of the earth’s ecosystem.

The producers are the ones, like the welders of Bethel, they are at the bottom, but their influence spreads all over the world and reaches all levels.

Ignoring them would be the greatest arrogance of mankind.

If algae blooms, it's a climate anomaly; if there's a decrease in algae, it's an ice age.

If the algae genes mutate, then the earth will directly update the expansion pack.

The earth doesn't matter, humans can't afford it anyway.

I hope I am being alarmist, but at least what is certain is that the actions of Xiaosheng will make a major judgment on the survival of all mankind.

What is thrown is a dice of fate, and I hope that mankind can throw a 'big success' again.

If in my writing, some civilizations are willing to go to war, they will not be allowed to endure such a throw of the dice for no reason.

That's a sign of immaturity.

But human beings as a whole are still unable to consider issues from a too high perspective and put collective interests at the highest level. They can only take into account the practical parts. You may even learn to follow this example...

This may be the difference between an advanced civilization and primitive civilization.

The latter is not yet a community with a shared future, and indeed cannot do much except watch and dare not eat aquatic products.

There is no other way, humans can only do so much.

For the sake of mankind, let's suffer a little more algae.

If I write about a higher civilization that is so immature, I write some unpleasant plots, but the civilization does nothing.

Readers are all scolding: Author, are you stupid? You write about civilization as if it were an imbecile, without logic. How could you deceive yourself and others like this? No one stopped you.

So in "The One Who Knows All Information", I changed the plot of choosing a guide.

I can only say that human beings are an advanced civilization, so if I write about her too harshly, it will make people unhappy.

I am also a bad person.

p.s: Sorry.

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