Calendar of Events for 2020 ~3050
Year 2020 AD
Complete book
#4
Flash floods
will very likely increase across all parts of Europe. (IPCC)
Less rainfall
could reduce agriculture yields by up to 50 percent in some parts of the world.
(IPCC)
World
population will reach 7.6 billion people. (U.S. Census Bureau)
2021-2025
Promote books
2026
20-year reunion of
ATLATL
2027
January hunting
trip
Begin
building underground houses
April Ranch Party
2028
Party
in Mexico
2029
January hunting
trip
4/13 Asteroid
travels very close to Earth. Big
Party
2030
January hunting
trip
Retire from
teaching
Begin writing
book #5
Seal
off caves. Inside are seeds and instructions for
effective technology, such as the atlatl.
Diarrhea-related
diseases will likely increase by up to 5 percent in low-income parts of the
world. (IPCC)
Up to 18
percent of the world’s coral
reefs will likely be lost as a result of climate change and other
environmental stresses. In Asian coastal waters, the coral loss could reach 30
percent. (IPCC)
World
population will reach 8.3 billion people. (U.S. Census Bureau)
Warming
temperatures will cause temperate
glaciers on equatorial mountains in Africa to disappear. (Richard Taylor,
University College London, Geophysical Research Letters:)
In developing
countries, the urban population will more than double to about 4 billion
people, packing more people onto a given city's land area. The urban
populations of developed countries may also increase by as much as 20 percent.
(World Bank: The Dynamics of Global Urban Expansion)
2031-2035
Travel the
Country lecturing and demonstrating techniques
2036
January hunting
trip
4/13 Asteroid
travels very close to Earth Big Party
2037-2039
Raise, train
and sell Texas Blue Lacy Game Dogs
2040
Complete book
#5
The Arctic Sea
could be ice-free
in the summer, and winter ice depth may shrink drastically. Other
scientists say the region will still have summer ice up to 2060 and 2105.
(Marika Holland, NCAR, Geophysical Research Letters)
2050
January hunting
trip
Establish foundation to complete unfinished
projects and prepare to die.
Small alpine
glaciers will very likely
disappear completely, and large glaciers will shrink by 30 to 70 percent. Austrian
scientist Roland Psenner of the University of Innsbruck says this is a
conservative estimate, and the small alpine glaciers could be gone as soon as
2037. (IPCC)
In Australia,
there will likely be an additional 3,200 to 5,200 heat-related deaths per year.
The hardest hit will be people over the age of 65. An extra 500 to 1,000 people
will die of heat-related deaths in New York City per year. In the United
Kingdom, the opposite will occur, and cold-related deaths will outpace
heat-related ones. (IPCC)
World
population reaches 9.4 billion people. (U.S. Census Bureau)
Crop yields
could increase by up to 20 percent in East and Southeast Asia, while decreasing
by up to 30 percent in Central and South Asia. Similar shifts in crop yields
could occur on other continents. (IPCC)
As
biodiversity hotspots are more threatened, a quarter of the world’s plant and
vertebrate animal species could
face extinction. (Jay Malcolm, University of Toronto, Conservation
Biology)
2060
Retirement
2070
Big Party
As glaciers
disappear and areas affected by drought increase, electricity production for
the world’s existing hydropower stations will decrease. Hardest hit will be
Europe, where hydropower potential is expected to decline on average by 6
percent; around the Mediterranean, the decrease could be up to 50 percent.
(IPCC)
Warmer, drier
conditions will lead to more frequent and longer droughts, as well as longer
fire-seasons, increased fire risks, and more frequent heat waves, especially in
Mediterranean regions. (IPCC)
2074
Bicentennial of the
Wenmohs ranch
2076
Tercentennial of
the USA
2080
While some
parts of the world dry out, others will be inundated. Scientists predict up to 20
percent of the world’s populations live in river basins likely to be affected
by increased flood hazards. Up to 100 million people could experience coastal
flooding each year. Most at risk are densely
populated and low-lying areas that are less able to adapt to rising sea
levels and areas which already face other challenges such as tropical storms.
(IPCC)
Coastal
population could balloon to 5 billion people, up from 1.2 billion in 1990.
(IPCC)
Between 1.1
and 3.2 billion people will experience water
shortages and up to 600 million will go hungry. (IPCC)
Sea levels could
rise around New York City by more than three feet, potentially flooding the
Rockaways, Coney Island, much of southern Brooklyn and Queens, portions of Long
Island City, Astoria, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens, lower Manhattan and
eastern Staten Island from Great Kills Harbor north to the Verrazano-Narrows
Bridge. (NASA GISS)
2085
The risk of
dengue fever from climate change is estimated to increase to 3.5 billion
people. (IPCC)
2100
A combination
of global warming and
other factors will push many ecosystems to the limit, forcing them to exceed
their natural ability to adapt to climate change. (IPCC)
Atmospheric carbon
dioxide levels will be much higher than anytime during the past 650,000
years. (IPCC)
Ocean pH levels
will very likely decrease by as much as 0.5 pH units, the lowest it’s been
in the last 20 million years. The ability of marine organisms such as corals,
crabs and oysters to form shells or exoskeletons could be impaired. (IPCC)
Thawing permafrost
and other factors will make Earth’s land a net source of carbon emissions,
meaning it will emit
more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than it absorbs. (IPCC)
Roughly 20 to
30 percent of species assessed as of 2007 could be extinct by 2100 if global
mean temperatures exceed 2 to 3 degrees of pre-industrial levels. (IPCC)
New climate
zones appear on up to 39 percent of the world’s land surface, radically
transforming the planet. (Jack Williams, University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
A quarter of
all species of plants and land animals—more than a million total—could be
driven to extinction. The IPCC reports warn that current “conservation
practices are generally ill-prepared for climate change and effective
adaptation responses are likely to be costly to implement.” (IPCC)
Increased
droughts could significantly
reduce moisture levels in the American Southwest, northern Mexico and
possibly parts of Europe, Africa and the Middle East, effectively recreating
the “Dust
Bowl” environments of the 1930s in the United States. (Richard Seager,
Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, Science)
2200
An Earth day
will be 0.12 milliseconds shorter, as rising temperatures cause oceans to
expand away from the equator and toward the poles, one model predicts. One
reason water will be shifted toward the poles is most of the expansion will
take place in the North Atlantic Ocean, near the North Pole. The poles are
closer to the Earth’s axis of rotation, so having more mass there should speed
up the planet’s rotation. (Felix Landerer, Max Planck Institute for
Meteorology, Geophysical Research Letters)
3000
Humans inhabit
other planets and leave Earth. However
some people remain.
3050
ATLATL
Foundation will use stone-age technology to save humankind on Earth.
3076
Quadracentennial of
the USA
Year 4000
Intergalactic Atlatl Association
annual meeting and competition in outer space.
Texas team
will participate.
4772
Anniversary of the
Mayan Creation Date (1.0.0.0.0.0 in the Long Count);
Year 5000 through 10,000 AD
To be scheduled,
weather permitting.
23,000 AD
Return of Marduk,
the 12th planet, whose passing causes earth changes, floods (Sitchen)
|
Bobcat
Smith Chief Operating Officer of the ATLATL. |
Roy Wenmohs Chief
Executive Officer of the ATLATL. |
Roger
Wildman Chief Safety Officer & ABNORMAL Committee Chairperson of the ATLATL. |
|
The Bodark
Branch of the ATLATL |
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History of the Austin Texas Lithic Arts & Technology
League. Short-Term Plans, present - 2009. Calendar
of Events 2010-2019. |
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Updated 09/01/2007