The world’s population is projected to hit 10 billion by the end of this century. A new produced by Population Connection, a nonprofit that advocates family planning programs, shows how scientific discoveries and inventions allowed civilizations to spread across the globe for the last 2,000 years. But the project, timed for World Population Day on July 11, also illustrates the strain that burgeoning numbers put on Earth’s limited resources.
Scientific advances, from the quotidian to the profound, made this human proliferation possible. Before 500 A.D., Chinese engineers designed harnesses for plow animals that improved agricultural production, and drilled oil wells that provided fuel for heating and cooking. The magnetic compass, which came into widespread use after 1300, led to the Age of Discovery and colonial expansion. Flush toilets, invented in 1775, reduced water-borne diseases. Nitrogen-based fertilizer, developed in 1913, helped crops yield more food. Without fertilizer, population analyst Vaclav Smil , two billion fewer people would be alive today.
But there is a downside: research suggests that the population rate , and will squeeze the world’s finite supply of fresh water, arable land and other essential resources. Until get that up and running, humans will have to do better at living on this planet.
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