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Is the Anthropocene distinct from the Holocene? [abstract only]

Authors :
Waters, Colin N.
Zalasiewicz, Jan
BARNOSKY, Anthony D.
CEARRETA, Alejandro
GAŁUSZKA, Agieszka
IVAR DO SUL, Juliana A.
JEANDEL, Catherine
POIRIER, Clement
STEFFEN, Will
SUMMERHAYES, Colin
VIDAS, Davor
WAGREICH, Michael
WOLFE, Alexander P.
Waters, Colin N.
Zalasiewicz, Jan
BARNOSKY, Anthony D.
CEARRETA, Alejandro
GAŁUSZKA, Agieszka
IVAR DO SUL, Juliana A.
JEANDEL, Catherine
POIRIER, Clement
STEFFEN, Will
SUMMERHAYES, Colin
VIDAS, Davor
WAGREICH, Michael
WOLFE, Alexander P.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The inaugural meeting of the Anthropocene Working Group of the Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy in Berlin (Oct. 2014) produced a consensus statement that “humans have altered geologic processes across the Earth system sufficiently to cause a planetary transition to a new interval of geological time”, with the timing of the onset the focus of continued debate, but with a majority in favour of a mid-20th century beginning. The name has driven the assumption that the Anthropocene should be an epoch, but are its signatures truly driven out of the range evident for most of the Holocene, or are changes comparable or subsidiary to Holocene stages? The evidence rests upon a broad range of signatures reflecting humanity’s significant and increasing modification of Earth systems. These are visible in anthropogenic deposits in the form of the greatest expansion of novel minerals in the last 2.4 billion years and development of ubiquitous materials, such as plastics, present in the environment only in the last 60 years. Globally distributed spherical carbonaceous particles of fly ash represent another near-synchronous and permanent proxy. The artefacts we produce, the technofossils of the future, provide a decadal to annual stratigraphical resolution. These materials and deposits have in recent decades extended into the oceans and increasingly into the subsurface both onshore and offshore. These anthropogenic deposits are transported at rates exceeding those of the sediment carried by rivers by an order of magnitude, fluvial systems themselves showing widespread sediment retention in response to dam construction across most major river systems. The Anthropocene is evident in sediment and glacial ice strata as chemical markers. CO2 in the atmosphere has risen by ~45 percent above pre-Industrial Revolution levels, mainly through combustion of hydrocarbons over a few decades. Although average global temperature increases and resultant sea-level rises are still comparativel

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn921277724
Document Type :
Electronic Resource