And now experts are saying this could change the way we think about conservation forever.
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00:00 (soft music)
00:02 Humans have had a pretty big impact on our planet.
00:06 From building intricate cities connected
00:08 by thousands of miles of roadways
00:10 to the way we've been warming the planet with industry.
00:12 But now a new study by researchers
00:14 from the University of Baltimore, Maryland County
00:16 reveals just how big an impact humanity
00:18 has also had on the ecology of the world.
00:21 This map shows the change of anthromes
00:23 or human land use biomes all over the world.
00:26 With each interval providing an illustration
00:28 of humanity's effects on the globe over millennia,
00:30 centuries and decade intervals.
00:32 As the animation moves through the years,
00:34 you can see the effects of humankind
00:36 on land all over the world.
00:37 And according to the study,
00:38 humans have reshaped most of the ecology
00:41 over the face of the entire planet
00:42 over the last 12 millennia.
00:44 Professor of Geography and Environmental Systems
00:46 at the University of Baltimore, Maryland County,
00:48 Dr. Earl Ellis said about the findings, quote,
00:51 "Our work shows that most areas depicted
00:53 "as untouched, wild and natural
00:55 "are actually areas with long histories
00:57 "of human inhabitation and use."
00:59 Adding, "Areas untouched by people
01:01 "were almost as rare 12,000 years ago as they are today,
01:05 "which some say could change our understanding
01:07 "of conservation and living on this planet,
01:09 "shifting away from a hands-off
01:11 "preservation style approach
01:12 "and moving to a more traditional
01:14 "and indigenous people's way of living
01:16 "more sustainably within nature."
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