Well, blow me down! It’s
International Meteorological Day today, and this year’s theme is clouds. The
main part of this annual celebration of the weather is to highlight the way in which
our climate effects our environment and the myriad of life forms it sustains.
Clouds are the visual manifestations of how the atmosphere works and can tell
us a lot about what is happening to the weather.
Our understanding of how
the weather works owes a lot (if not all) to the work of one extraordinary
German scientist called Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859). He spent many years
travelling the globe taking measurements of everything from air temperature to
plants he saw on his expeditions.
Humboldt was the most
famous scientist of his era. Everyone wanted to meet him, which was very
difficult considering he spent so much time climbing up volcanos and trudging
through jungles. Kings and presidents as well as other famous scientists wanted
to meet him. He became a celebrity. The last decades of his life were spent in
Germany where he died following a stroke. His funeral was of state proportions
with Prussian royalty in attendance.
Unlike today’s scientific
world which is very compartmentalised Humboldt saw all science as connected. No
subject could be studied on its own. Geology, geography, climatology, physics
and magnetism all created the environment in which specific plants, animals and
bacteria could live. Humboldt’s work meant that people knew why there were no
polar bears in the jungle, or why there are no palm trees at the top of high
mountains.
The most significant
contribution to the modern world is his pioneering work into what is now the
study of climate change. It’s the biggest natural concern of the modern era.
And here we realise what a significant year this is. It was in 1817, 200 years
ago, that Alexander von Humboldt published his first map of isotherms.
Isothermic maps show areas
of equal mean annual temperature in the atmosphere. For the first time people
saw a global map of the air around them. Scientists had many lists of
temperatures of many locations around the globe. Humboldt was the first to show
continuous isothermic lines going around the whole world.
During his travels and
measurement-taking Humboldt also began to realise that humanity was changing
his environment. By destroying forests the ground soil is deprived of
nutrients, and rainfall can wash away such poor soil. Even though he wasn’t the
first to warn about humanity’s destructive effect on nature (Christian
philosopher were saying the same several centuries earlier) Humboldt has been
hailed as the father of environmentalism.
Most of Humboldt’s
measurements were taken during his 5-year expedition to Latin and South America.
In what is now Ecuador he met the most significant of this “significant
others”. A Spanish colonial aristocrat persuaded Humboldt to let his son, Don
Carlos de Montúfar (1780-1816) to join the expedition. Not that Humboldt needed
any persuading or that Don Carlos objected. A fellow explorer complained that
Humboldt had spent too much time with young men who practiced “impure loves”
and that the drop-dead-gorgeous, 21-year-old Don Carlos was obviously having
sex with him. But then, this disgruntled explorer was probably jealous that
Humboldt didn’t take him on his expedition instead of the young man.
Humboldt and Carlos parted
ways after they arrived in France for the imperial coronation of Napoleon.
Neither subsequently married nor had any closer friendships. Don Carlos went on
to become a hero of the independence movement in South America and deserves his
own extraordinary swash-buckling article some time in the future. Back to
Humboldt.
Among Humboldt’s many
other published works were illustrations of mountains showing temperatures,
climates, plants and animals at various altitudes and cross-sections showing
soil and rock composition. All were complimented with other data. People might
think that infographics are a modern idea, but Alexander von Humboldt was
designing them over 200 years ago.
Considering how famous he
was in his lifetime and in the decades following his death it is surprising how
little known he is today. People have heard of Newton, Galilieo, Darwin and
Hawking. It could be argued that Alexander von Humboldt had a bigger influence
on the modern world than any of them. The science world shows his high regard.
The fact that more plant and animal species and geographical locations have
been named after Humboldt is proof of his great reputation. He is also
(perhaps) the first non-mythological figure, and first male, to have an
asteroid named after him (54 Alexandra), and the first non-mythological figure
to have a second asteroid named after him (4877 Humboldt).
No comments:
Post a Comment