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Big Picture Science

Catching Fire

Big Picture Science

Big Picture Science

Science, Technology

4.5 • 1K Ratings

🗓️ 19 August 2024

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We have too much “bad fire.” Not only destructive wildfires, but the combustion that powers our automobiles and provides our electricity has generated a worrying rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide. And that is driving climate change which is adding to the frequency of megafires. Now we’re seeing those effects in “fire-clouds,” pyrocumulonimbus events. But there’s such a thing as “good fire.” Indigenous peoples managed the land with controlled fires, reaped the benefits of doing so, and they’re bringing them back. So after millions of years of controlling fire, is it time for us to revisit our attitudes and policies, not just with regard to combustion, but how we manage our wildfires? Guests: David Peterson - Meteorologist, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Stephen Pyne - Emeritus professor at Arizona State University, fire historian, urban farmer, author of “The Pyrocene: How We Created an Age of Fire, and What Happens Next” Richard Wrangham - Ruth B. Moore Research Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard University and author of "Catching Fire: How Coooking Made Us Human" Margo Robbins - Co-founder and president of the Cultural Fire Management Council (CFMC), organizer of the Cultural Burn Training Exchange (TREX) that takes place on the Yurok Reservation twice a year, and an enrolled member of the Yurok Tribe Originally aired May 9, 2022 Featuring music by Dewey Dellay and Jun Miyake Big Picture Science is part of the Airwave Media podcast network. Please contact advertising@airwavemedia.com to inquire about advertising on Big Picture Science. You can get early access to ad-free versions of every episode by joining us on Patreon. Thanks for your support!   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:19.5

I'm Matt Kaplan, the host of Safeguarding

0:22.0

sound science, Evolution Edition. Evolution is the unifying principle of biology, yet it still breeds

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controversy a century and a half after Charles Darwin. Join us as we meet the passionate

0:34.7

researchers and communicators who are expanding our knowledge

0:38.1

and fighting to keep good science

0:40.1

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0:42.8

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0:44.8

on Apple, Spotify, Amazon,

0:47.4

or wherever you like to listen.

0:49.3

Music We live in a world that more than ever is ready to burn.

1:03.3

Tonight, dual wildfires burning out of control in Arizona.

1:07.2

Let's begin with the escalating bushfire emergency in Western Australia.

1:13.6

The Amazon rainforest is on fire again. Whole mountains, hills and valleys engulfed in smoke.

1:16.6

Wildfires have increased in frequency and severity across the world.

1:20.6

We're interested in their connection to this.

1:34.9

Yes, cars that belch combustion byproducts warm the planet, which leads to more severe wildfires. But a car's engine is also an example of how we've controlled fire.

1:39.0

It's one part of the long and productive relationship humans have had with fire, but now that

1:43.8

relationship is changing. The problem is we have too much with fire, but now that relationship is changing.

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