Earth Day should Celebrate “Engines and Electricity”
Most chapters of human history are defined by the tools and machines
that were used.
In the Stone Age, the first tools were “green tools” – digging sticks,
spears, boomerangs, bows and arrows made of wood; and axes, clubs, knives and
grinders made of stone. These were all powered by human energy.
Then humans learned how to control fire for warmth, cooking, warfare and
hunting.
Another clever person invented the wheel and we harnessed animal power using donkeys, horses, mules and oxen, and made better tools like bridles, saddles and yokes from wood, fibre and leather.
Another clever person invented the wheel and we harnessed animal power using donkeys, horses, mules and oxen, and made better tools like bridles, saddles and yokes from wood, fibre and leather.
All of these tools made hunting, gathering and trade easier and more
reliable.
Then wooden ploughs revolutionised the cultivation of wild grasses for
food for animals and humans. Farming started.
Trade and exchange was made easier with money using rare commodities
like gold, silver, gems and shells.
Tool-making made a huge advance in the Bronze Age with the discovery of
how to extract metals like copper, lead, zinc and tin from natural ores using
charcoal. Brass, bronze and pewter made many useful tools. These were then
replaced with better tools when man discovered how to smelt iron and make
steel.
Then along came the game-changers – engines and electricity.
The steam engine, running on wood and then on coal or oil,
revolutionised life with steam-driven pumps, traction engines and locomotives
releasing millions of draught animals from transport duty.
Then came electricity when steam engines were used to drive generators.
All the windmills, coaches, sailing ships, lamps, stoves and dryers powered by
green energy (wind, water, wood, animal energy, whale oil and beeswax) became
obsolete.
Mankind made another leap forward with the invention of internal
combustion engines using petroleum liquids and gases for fuel. An even bigger
leap was the harnessing of nuclear power to produce almost unlimited clean
energy from controlled reactions using tiny amounts of fuel.
Nothing in life is without risk, and every tool or engine can be
misused. On balance, however, tools, engines and electricity have allowed
humans to live better from less land and natural resources per person than ever
before. Societies with an abundance of capital equipment are richer, have lower
population growth and have the leisure and resources to provide far more
environmental protection,
...
therefore we should spend “Earth Day” celebrating “Engines and Electricity”. Viv Forbes
Viv has a degree in Applied Science Geology and is a Fellow of the
Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
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