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Technology and human purpose: The problem of solids transport on the Earth's surface

Publication ,  Journal Article
Haff, PK
Published in: Earth System Dynamics
December 11, 2012

Displacement of mass of limited deformability ("solids") on the Earth's surface is opposed by friction and (the analog of) form resistance - impediments relaxed by rotational motion, self-powering of mass units, and transport infrastructure. These features of solids transport first evolved in the biosphere prior to the emergence of technology, allowing slope-independent, diffusion-like motion of discrete objects as massive as several tons, as illustrated by animal foraging and movement along game trails. However, highenergy-consumption technology powered by fossil fuels required a mechanism that could support fast advective transport of solids, i.e., long-distance, high-volume, high-speed, unidirectional, slope-independent transport across the land surface of materials like coal, containerized fluids, minerals, and economic goods. Pre-technology nature was able to sustain regional- and global-scale advection only in the limited form of piggybacking on geophysical flows of water (river sediment) and air (dust). The appearance of a mechanism for sustained advection of solids independent of fluid flows and gravity appeared only upon the emergence of human purpose. Purpose enables solids advection by, in effect, simulating a continuous potential gradient, otherwise lacking, between discrete and widely separated fossil-fuel energy sources and sinks. Invoking purpose as a mechanism in solids advection is an example of the need to import anthropic principles and concepts into the language and methodology of modern Earth system dynamics. As part of the emergence of a generalized solids advection mechanism, several additional transport requirements necessary to the function of modern large-scale technological systems were also satisfied. These include spatially accurate delivery of advected payload, targetability to essentially arbitrarily located destinations (such as cities), and independence of structure of advected payload from transport mechanism. The latter property enables the transport of an onboard power supply and delivery of persistent-memory, high-information-content payload, such as technological artifacts ("parts"). ©Author(s)2012.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Earth System Dynamics

DOI

EISSN

2190-4987

ISSN

2190-4979

Publication Date

December 11, 2012

Volume

3

Issue

2

Start / End Page

149 / 156

Related Subject Headings

  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0405 Oceanography
  • 0401 Atmospheric Sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Haff, P. K. (2012). Technology and human purpose: The problem of solids transport on the Earth's surface. Earth System Dynamics, 3(2), 149–156. https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-3-149-2012
Haff, P. K. “Technology and human purpose: The problem of solids transport on the Earth's surface.” Earth System Dynamics 3, no. 2 (December 11, 2012): 149–56. https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-3-149-2012.
Haff PK. Technology and human purpose: The problem of solids transport on the Earth's surface. Earth System Dynamics. 2012 Dec 11;3(2):149–56.
Haff, P. K. “Technology and human purpose: The problem of solids transport on the Earth's surface.” Earth System Dynamics, vol. 3, no. 2, Dec. 2012, pp. 149–56. Scopus, doi:10.5194/esd-3-149-2012.
Haff PK. Technology and human purpose: The problem of solids transport on the Earth's surface. Earth System Dynamics. 2012 Dec 11;3(2):149–156.

Published In

Earth System Dynamics

DOI

EISSN

2190-4987

ISSN

2190-4979

Publication Date

December 11, 2012

Volume

3

Issue

2

Start / End Page

149 / 156

Related Subject Headings

  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0405 Oceanography
  • 0401 Atmospheric Sciences