1: Scotland
The trees are on the move, and they shouldn't be. Ben Rawlence discovers what the moving treeline can tell us about the past, present and future of our planet. Today: Scotland.
Stephen Campbell Moore reads Ben Rawlence's unflinching account of what the North's moving treeline will mean for humanity.
The trees are on the move. They shouldn't be. More than the Amazon rainforest, the northern boreal is truly the lung of the world. Covering one fifth of the globe and containing one third of all the trees on earth, it has been foundational to our climate for the last few million years. But now the northern forest is marching towards to the North Pole, turning the white Arctic green. And scientists are only just beginning to understand what this might mean for life on earth.
In Scotland, Scandinavia, Siberia, Canada and Greenland, Rawlence discovers what the trees and the people who live and work alongside them have to tell us about the past, present and future of our planet. At the treeline he sees the devastating and accelerating impact of climate change, but also some reasons for hope.
Today: Rawlence travels to Scotland in search of the pine forests of the Highlands.
Writer: Ben Rawlence is the author of City of Thorns and Radio Congo, and writes for publications including the Guardian, the London Review of Books and The New York Times.
Abridger: Richard Hamilton
Reader: Stephen Campbell Moore
Producer: Justine Willett
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