Research & Manpower in the Mineral Industries

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
P. M. Dranchuk
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
2634 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1971

Abstract

"""PLANET EARTH seen from space appears as a fragile and limited life-supporting system in a vast emptiness. That such a view is, in fact, an accurate one is now more widely accepted than it was not long ago, before Earth's problems of over-population, overconsumption, limited resources and environmental degradation attained the limelight. The danger is that a government and public now deluged by doomsday prophecies and bemused by equally confident reiterations that technology will cure all may hesitate in coming to grips with the problem, in the hope that, given time, it will go away."" With these words, Preston Cloud begins a recent editorial, in Science(l), in which he presents a brief resume of some of the findings of the Committee on Resources and Man of the National Academy of Science-National Research Council(20.Their report, which is based on a two-year study by an extremely competent group and consists of some 250 pages of text, is even more far-reaching and sobering than the report on Energy Resources(3). It begins by quoting Sir Macfarlane Burnet as follows:""There are three imperatives: to reduce war to a minimum; to stabilize human population, and to pre-vent the progressive destruction of the earth's irreplaceable resources.(4)"
Citation

APA: P. M. Dranchuk  (1971)  Research & Manpower in the Mineral Industries

MLA: P. M. Dranchuk Research & Manpower in the Mineral Industries. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1971.

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