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16 Nov 2008 11:12 am
Goodbye Moon
Verlyn Klinkenborg sees the danger of light pollution:
Unlike astronomers, most of us may not need an undiminished view of the night sky for our work, but like most other creatures we do need darkness. Darkness is as essential to our biological welfare, to our internal clockwork, as light itself. The regular oscillation of waking and sleep in our lives—one of our circadian rhythms—is nothing less than a biological expression of the regular oscillation of light on Earth. So fundamental are these rhythms to our being that altering them is like altering gravity.
For the past century or so, we've been performing an open-ended
experiment on ourselves, extending the day, shortening the night, and
short-circuiting the human body's sensitive response to light. The
consequences of our bright new world are more readily perceptible in
less adaptable creatures living in the peripheral glow of our
prosperity. But for humans, too, light pollution may take a biological
toll. At least one new study has suggested a direct correlation between
higher rates of breast cancer in women and the nighttime brightness of
their neighborhoods.
I've posted on the undark night before.
(Hat tip: 3QD)
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