Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
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Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
Planet earth with green Sahara and green Australia hypotheses fulfilled would probably fulfil the criteria.
I think this has more to do with continent arrangement and prevailing winds than gross physical properties. |
Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
Deserts tend to develop in continental centers, so more numerous smaller land masses should keep giant human-inhospitable zones to a minimum.
Slightly higher oxygen levels would make little difference at sea level but help those living at high elevations. |
Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
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Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
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Additionally, the evenings cool down nicely, here, whereas in Kentucky it was hot and steamy throughout the night. Moreover, if I really want to escape the heat, I go to the mountains for a couple of days. Even in the hottest part of the summer, the nights at 12,000 feet (3.7 km) usually see temperatures in the mid-40s Farenheit (7-9 degrees, Celsius), while the days are in the mid-70s F (23-26 C). Out on the Eastern Plains it gets a little warmer, but even there it cools down at night. The lack of trees kinda sucks, though, and I do sometimes miss Kentucky's deep forests. Here in the Front Range piemont region, though, it's a nice mix of prairie, rolling hills, foothills, and light forests, with a fair number of small streams and small rivers. Add in a pretty nice city with few of the problems experienced in larger urban areas, and Colorado is pretty optimal, generally speaking. I think that climate pretty much supports your notion that, for many people, our evolutionary heritage makes this a nigh-perfect climate, albeit a bit cooler than the Rift Valley, in Africa. The winters, here, are different than most people think, too. In good years, the snow gets pretty deep in the mountains, but Denver stays cool, clear and dry during the days (although it does get really cold, at night). These days, we see temperatures in the 50s and 60s, with sunny conditions, on many winter days (that's significantly warmer than when I was a kid, here, and most days were in the low 40s to low 50s, but still clear and dry). This is a good year. The Pineapple Express that has drenched California brought steady snows to the Colorado mountains, and the snow-pack is significantly above average. If we get a wet spring, then we may have some local flooding problems. However, the reservoirs were already pretty full from the incredibly wet spring two years ago. Lake Powell will likely see more water in the reservoir than in many years, starting in a month or two. https://www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/ftpref...mal_update.png http://www.cbrfc.noaa.gov/wsup/pub2/...on/current.pdf |
Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
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.....says that 40% of Hawaii's land is farmland. This is after a real estate boom with prices that could make a Californian blink. There's a lot more to Hawaii than the beaches and the slopes of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa. |
Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
Anyhoo, I would guess there's a lot of shallow seas, since they are much more productive than deep seas.
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Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
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I read somewhere that deserts tend to form over the tropics of capricorn and cancer, with the exception of tall mountain ranges. So more careful landform positioning would help with that. It might be a great place to put these shallow seas. |
Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
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Re: [Space] What is the 'Gaia' type of garden worlds like? ('Habitability 9').
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Why our friends chose the middle of summer for their nuptials I'll never understand. My sweat glands never forgave them. |
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