Humanity’s headstone is built, only its epitaph awaits 

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As the arc of civilisation careens past its inflection point, the world has ceased speaking of climate change in future tense.

Recent bushfires in British Columbia, a tourist at Death Valley National Park, and the Southern Ocean (Images: AAP) Recent bushfires in British Columbia, a tourist at Death Valley National Park, and the Southern Ocean (Images: AAP)

Ineffable. One of few words that capture the sudden foreboding engulfing much of the world as our unnatural chemistry experiment on the planet begins, manifestly and in earnest, to backfire. 

For several harrowing weeks, the northern hemisphere has been freighted with preposterous, record-breaking heat. From the foothills of the Pyrenees to Rome and Beijing, millions have sweltered through temperatures regularly exceeding 40 degrees and beyond, with conditions in the near-Arctic region of Fort Good Hope in Canada’s faraway northwest eclipsing 37 degrees. 

Concurrent heatwaves in Africa have meanwhile seen the continent duly report its hottest night on record at 39.6 degrees, and in the background of all this, Canada’s months-long apocalyptic wildfires continue to rage unabated. Today, the haunting umbra of the wildfires’ plume not only continues to smother New York in smoke and ash but has also snaked its way into the distant skies of Spain and Portugal. 

Read more about mankind’s geological gravestone.

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About the Author

Maeve McGregor

Public affairs correspondent

Maeve McGregor is the public affairs correspondent for Crikey, with a special interest in law and government integrity issues. Prior to this, she was a lawyer.

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