30 December 2020 (Desdemona Despair) – 2020 was the year that everybody got cozy with graphs showing exponential growth. A number of high-quality data sources showing the progression of the pandemic were published online, so anybody could rummage through the grim numbers and estimate their local risk.
A few standout sites made it into Desdemona’s daily tour of the morbidity and mortality data, but the COVID-19 Dashboard by John Hopkins University was always the first stop. Indispensable for anyone with a compulsion to follow the pandemic’s progression, the JHU data set is the gold standard for tracking the virus as it colonizes human biomass.
One of the best graphing tools for the JHU data came from Prof. Wade Fagen-Ulmschneider, who created 91-Divoc. With these graphs, it’s easy to browse the data by nation and compare which ones are succeeding and which have failed to contain the virus. You can graph daily morbidity and mortality rates, display them by country or U.S. state, and create animated GIFs of your graphs.
In the U.S., the Covid Act Now map is a great tool for keeping tabs on your county’s progress in containing the virus, showing ICU capacity, infection rates, and daily new cases. Here’s the current dire situation in Los Angeles County, on 30 December 2020:
Satellite imagery and ground-based photos show the stark difference in pollution levels when the world’s industrial infrastructure is largely idled.
But possibly the most evocative graph arrived late in the year, showing a new angle on another exponential curve, the so-called “Great Acceleration”:
This study finds that the mass of human-made materials now equals the total biomass of the entire planet, and this “anthropogenic mass” is doubling every twenty years. After reading this paper, my first reaction was that we may yet see Isaac Asimov’s Caves of Steel come to pass.
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