Planet Earth
Today, we go beyond the warming planet to uncover the "invisible influence" of the air on our very biology. As CO2 levels reach a monthly average of 425 parts per million at the Mauna Loa observatory, we are entering a chemical reality not seen on Earth for millions of years. This episode explores the startling discovery that high CO2 levels are literally dissolving the skeletons of astronauts, submariners, and ocean snails alike. The impact reaches even deeper—into our capacity for thought. We examine controlled studies showing that as CO2 levels rise in crowded rooms, strategic decision-making "plummets drastically," leaving the brain struggling to think through a physiological "fog". From the silent, tragic eruption at Lake Nyos to the everyday air in our offices and schools, we look at how a "flattening gradient" in our lungs makes it harder for our bodies to offload waste gas. As we face a future where the freshest air on the planet could soon resemble a stuffy, polluted room, we must ask: what happens to human intelligence when the air itself works against us?.
14 episodes
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