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The Climate Chronicles
Dagomar Degroot
11 episodes
7 months ago
Human-caused global warming has only heated the planet for about a century. But climate change has always affected humanity. Natural climate changes were different from today’s global warming, but they did influence our history. The Climate Chronicles explores that influence, and explains what it can tell us about today’s climate crisis. Written, produced, and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot, one of the world’s leading historians of climate change, The Climate Chronicles takes you on a remarkable journey through 50 million years of history. Find out more at TheClimateChronicles.com.
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History
Science,
Earth Sciences
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All content for The Climate Chronicles is the property of Dagomar Degroot and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Human-caused global warming has only heated the planet for about a century. But climate change has always affected humanity. Natural climate changes were different from today’s global warming, but they did influence our history. The Climate Chronicles explores that influence, and explains what it can tell us about today’s climate crisis. Written, produced, and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot, one of the world’s leading historians of climate change, The Climate Chronicles takes you on a remarkable journey through 50 million years of history. Find out more at TheClimateChronicles.com.
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History
Science,
Earth Sciences
Episodes (11/11)
The Climate Chronicles
Episode 11: Memories of Atlantis
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change has shaped humanity’s past—and what history can tell us about the future of global warming. With clear, dramatic storytelling, each episode brings history to life through gripping narratives and cutting-edge science. In the fifth and final episode of our second season, Escaping the Pleistocene, Professor Degroot reveals how an extraordinary rise in sea levels, about 10,000 years ago, overwhelmed ecosystems and human populations from Europe to Australia. He evaluates whether ancient myths and legends, including the story of Atlantis, preserve traumatic memories of early Holocene flooding. And he provides some broad reflections on the 100,000 years of human and climate history covered in this season. Season two of The Climate Chronicles is an immersive journey through the extreme climate shifts that influenced some of the most important events in the history of our species, from a wave of extinctions that transformed ecosystems around the world to the emergence of agriculture. The season also explores the history of the sciences that have revealed how climate change shaped our deep past.    For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with citations, as well as maps, graphs, infographics, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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7 months ago
49 minutes 8 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 10: The Younger Dryas Diaries
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change has shaped humanity’s past—and what history can tell us about the future of global warming. With clear, dramatic storytelling, each episode brings history to life through gripping narratives and cutting-edge science. In the fourth episode of our second season, Escaping the Pleistocene, Professor Degroot unpacks concepts such as radiocarbon dating and climate vulnerability to explore the ingenious and diverse ways in which our ancestors coped with the Pleistocene's final, and in many ways most spectacular, climate changes. He explains how everything from asteroid impacts to volcanic eruptions may have triggered the dramatic breakdown in ocean currents responsible for the most recent of these changes, a thousand-year cold snap known as the Younger Dryas. Finally, he surveys cutting-edge research that suggests we might soon face a similar breakdown—with profound implications for our modern world.    Season two of The Climate Chronicles is an immersive journey through the extreme climate shifts that influenced some of the most important events in the history of our species, from a wave of extinctions that transformed ecosystems around the world to the emergence of agriculture. The season also explores the history of the sciences that have revealed how climate change shaped our deep past.    For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with citations, as well as maps, graphs, infographics, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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7 months ago
52 minutes 11 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 9: The Last of Them
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change has shaped humanity’s past—and what history can tell us about the future of global warming. With clear, dramatic storytelling, each episode brings history to life through gripping narratives and cutting-edge science.In the third episode of our second season, Escaping the Pleistocene, Professor Degroot provides different explanations for what may be the ultimate climate change disaster: the extinction of our closest relatives, the Neanderthals, a hominin species that may have been as smart as us. He shows us how new computer models can help us understand the possible causes for the disappearance of the Neanderthals, and considers whether their extinction provides a warning for our future.  Season two of The Climate Chronicles is an immersive journey through the extreme climate shifts that influenced some of the most important events in the history of our species, from a wave of extinctions that transformed ecosystems around the world to the emergence of agriculture. The season also explores the history of the sciences that have revealed how climate change shaped our deep past.    For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with citations, as well as maps, graphs, infographics, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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8 months ago
39 minutes 58 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 8: The Sapien Shock
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change has shaped humanity’s past—and what history can tell us about the future of global warming. With clear, dramatic storytelling, each episode brings history to life through gripping narratives and cutting-edge science.In the second episode of our second season, Escaping the Pleistocene, Professor Degroot explores how climate change influenced humanity's migration out of Africa, and into lands no other hominin had been to before. He unpacks why proving climate’s role in human migration (or any historical event) is so challenging. Then, he investigates the worldwide wave of extinctions that coincided both with humanity's dispersal around the world, and with the extreme climatic upheavals of the late Pleistocene. Season two of The Climate Chronicles is an immersive journey through the extreme climate shifts that influenced some of the most important events in the history of our species, from a wave of extinctions that transformed ecosystems around the world to the emergence of agriculture. The season also explores the history of the sciences that have revealed how climate change shaped our deep past.    For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with citations, as well as maps, graphs, infographics, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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8 months ago
44 minutes 30 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 7: Avoiding the Apocalypse
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change has shaped humanity’s past—and what history can tell us about the future of global warming. With clear, dramatic storytelling, each episode brings history to life through gripping narratives and cutting-edge science.   In the first episode of our second season, Escaping the Pleistocene, Professor Degroot describes the two biggest explosions in human history: the catastrophic eruptions of the Los Chocoyos and Toba super volcanoes, about 75,000 years ago. These cataclysmic blasts chilled the Earth—but recent research suggests that, against all odds, most of our ancestors survived unscathed.   Season two of The Climate Chronicles is an immersive journey through the extreme climate shifts that influenced some of the most important events in the history of our species, from a wave of extinctions that transformed ecosystems around the world to the emergence of agriculture. The season also explores the history of the sciences that have revealed how climate change shaped our deep past.    For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with maps, graphs, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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8 months ago
31 minutes 58 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 6: Growing up in the Glacials
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change shaped humanity's past. With clear, dramatic storytelling, it explores what history can tell us about the future of global warming.In the fifth and final episode of our first season, "Becoming Human," Professor Degroot tells the epic story of how climate change spurred the evolution of the last hominin species - including our own. He explains how ancient DNA is uncovering previously hidden chapters in this remarkable tale. Finally, he closes the season by considering the implications of the deep histories we've explored in the past five episodes.    For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with maps, graphs, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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9 months ago
41 minutes 9 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 5: Miracles of Resilience
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change shaped humanity's past. With clear, dramatic storytelling, it explores what history can tell us about the future of global warming.In the fourth episode of our first season, "Becoming Human," Professor Degroot explores how our hominin ancestors learned to cope with, and even exploit, the wildly fluctuating climate of the Pleistocene. He uses the extraordinary migration of a hominin species named Homo erectus to introduce the concept of resilience: a key but contested term that can help us understand our fate on a warming world.    For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with maps, graphs, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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9 months ago
30 minutes 20 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 4: The Precarious Pleistocene
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change shaped humanity's past. With clear, dramatic storytelling, it explores what history can tell us about the future of global warming.In the third episode of our first season, "Becoming Human," Professor Degroot touches on everything from Noah's Flood to nuclear submarines in telling the strange, three-century-long history of the discovery of the Ice Age. Then, he explains why rapid climate changes of remarkable intensity threatened our ancestors in the world of the late Pleistocene Epoch.   For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with maps, graphs, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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9 months ago
33 minutes 20 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 3: The Great Cooling
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change shaped humanity's past. With clear, dramatic storytelling, it explores what history can tell us about the future of global warming.    In our third episode, the second of our first season, "Becoming Human," Professor Degroot takes listeners through the dramatic cooling of our planet that began some 45 million years ago. He explains how climate change influenced evolution - including the evolution of our distant ancestors in a drying Africa. For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with maps, graphs, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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9 months ago
30 minutes 57 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 1, Introduction: A Shore on Svalbard
Human-caused global warming has only heated the planet for about a century. But climate change has always affected humanity. With clear, dramatic storytelling, The Climate Chronicles tells the remarkable story of how climate change influenced our past - and how it may imperil our future.  In our introductory episode, Professor Degroot uses one of the great adventure stories of the seventeenth century - the tale of fourteen desperate men deserted on two tiny Arctic islands - to identify key themes in the history of climate change.For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with maps, graphs, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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10 months ago
35 minutes 54 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Episode 2: Antecedents of the Anthropocene
Created and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot of Georgetown University, The Climate Chronicles reveals how climate change shaped humanity's past. With clear, dramatic storytelling, it explores what history can tell us about the future of global warming.    In our second episode, the first of our first season, "Becoming Human," Professor Degroot introduces the far-fetched possibility that humanity might not be the first intelligent species to overheat the Earth. By investigating this idea, Degroot explains how scientists piece together the deep history of climate change on Earth.   For an episode trailer and a transcript complete with maps, graphs, and other images, visit TheClimateChronicles.com.
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10 months ago
34 minutes 45 seconds

The Climate Chronicles
Human-caused global warming has only heated the planet for about a century. But climate change has always affected humanity. Natural climate changes were different from today’s global warming, but they did influence our history. The Climate Chronicles explores that influence, and explains what it can tell us about today’s climate crisis. Written, produced, and narrated by Professor Dagomar Degroot, one of the world’s leading historians of climate change, The Climate Chronicles takes you on a remarkable journey through 50 million years of history. Find out more at TheClimateChronicles.com.