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Gamers Face Global Climate Change, Flooding

I had the pleasure of meeting David de Rothschild, National Geographic Society emerging explorer - and founder of Adventure Ecology - on a recent shoot for Outside Magazine. David uses his adventurous treks across the globe to teach audiences about global warming. In January 2005, he completed a trek across Antarctica via the South Pole, and five months later set a speed record for crossing the Greenland ice cap (or what still exists of it). Check out Mission 1 profiled here.

His aim with his work and with Adventure Ecology is to use the romance of adventure, and the power of the Internet, to unite the world’s schoolchildren in the fight against global warming and environmental degradation.

Most recently in the game, Second Life, David staged a global warming flood - that took over London, the Netherlands, Ibiza and Tokyo.

“Our message was, You may have a second life, but [you still need to] offset your second life in real life,” said David de Rothschild, a London-based environmentalist and adventurer whose nonprofit Adventure Ecology helped stage today’s flood.

Over 5.2 million people live online in the second life and David felt it was the perfect way to reach out to a wide audience. Read more via National Geographic.

from itsgettinghotinhere.org

Comments
  1. Kim said:

    Summer I saw your piece in Outside - congrats - nice!

  2. Starre said:

    I have ‘played’ in Second Life a couple times to see what it was about….it was pretty interesting, and defintely a place to affect change in real people’s lives as the whole premise of the game is that you are communicating with other real people sitting behind their keyboards. What a great idea David had in bringing global warming to this faux world….and getting the message out to a whole new (very international, from my experience) population of people.

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