by Elizabeth Kolbert -  Yale Environment  360
Is human activity altering the planet on a scale comparable to major geological events of the past? Scientists are now considering whether to officially designate a new geological epoch to reflect the changes that homo sapiens have wrought: the Anthropocene.
The Holocene — or “wholly recent” epoch — is what geologists call the 11,000 years or so since the end of the last ice age. As epochs go, the Holocene is barely out of diapers; its immediate predecessor, the Pleistocene, lasted more than two million years, while many earlier epochs, like the Eocene, went on for more than 20 million years. Still, the Holocene may be done for. People have become such a driving force on the planet that many geologists argue a new epoch — informally dubbed the Anthropocene — has begun.
The Holocene — or “wholly recent” epoch — is what geologists call the 11,000 years or so since the end of the last ice age. As epochs go, the Holocene is barely out of diapers; its immediate predecessor, the Pleistocene, lasted more than two million years, while many earlier epochs, like the Eocene, went on for more than 20 million years. Still, the Holocene may be done for. People have become such a driving force on the planet that many geologists argue a new epoch — informally dubbed the Anthropocene — has begun.
In a recent paper titled “The New World of  the Anthropocene,” which appeared in the journal Environmental  Science and Technology, a group of geologists listed more than a  half dozen human-driven processes that are likely to leave a lasting  mark on the planet — lasting here understood to mean likely to leave  traces that will last tens of millions of years. These include: habitat  destruction and the introduction of invasive species, which are causing  widespread extinctions; ocean acidification, which is changing the  chemical makeup of the seas; and urbanization, which is vastly  increasing rates of sedimentation and erosion.
Human activity, the group wrote, is altering the planet “on a scale  comparable with some of the major events of the ancient past. Some of  these changes are now seen as permanent, even on a geological  time-scale.”
Prompted by the group’s paper, the Independent of London  last month conducted a straw poll of the members of the International  Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS), the official keeper of the  geological time scale. Half the commission members surveyed said they  thought the case for a new epoch was already strong enough to consider a  formal designation.
“Human activities, particularly since the onset of the industrial  revolution, are clearly having a major impact on the Earth,” Barry  Richards of the Geological Survey of Canada told the newspaper. “We are  leaving a clear and unique record.”
The term “Anthropocene” was coined a decade ago by Paul Crutzen, one  of the three chemists who shared the 1995 Nobel Prize for discovering  the effects of ozone-depleting compounds. In a paper published in 2000,  Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer, a professor at the University of Michigan,  noted that many forms of human activity now dwarf their natural  counterparts; for instance, more nitrogen today is fixed synthetically  than is fixed by all the world’s plants, on land and in the ocean.  Considering this, the pair wrote in the newsletter of the International  Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, “it seems to us more than appropriate to  emphasize the central role of mankind in geology and ecology by  proposing to use the term ‘anthropocene’ for the current geological  epoch.” Two years later, Crutzen restated the argument in an article in Nature  titled “Geology of Mankind.”
The Anthropocene, Crutzen wrote, “could be said to have started in  the latter part of the eighteenth century, when analyses of air trapped  in polar ice showed the beginning of growing global concentrations of  carbon dioxide and methane.”
Soon, the term began popping up in other scientific publications.  “Riverine quality of the Anthropocene,” was the title of a 2002 paper in  the journal Aquatic Sciences.
“Soils and sediments in the anthropocene,” read the title of a 2004  editorial in the Journal of Soils and Sediments.
Jan Zalasiewicz, a geologist at the Britain’s University of  Leicester, found the spread of the concept intriguing. “I noticed that  Paul Crutzen’s term was appearing in the serious literature, in papers  in Science and such like, without inverted commas and without a  sense of irony,” he recalled in a recent interview. At the time,  Zalasiewicz was the head of the stratigraphic commission of the  Geological Society of London. At luncheon meeting of the society, he  asked his fellow stratigraphers what they thought of the idea.
“We simply discussed it,” he said. “And to my surprise, because these  are technical geologists, a majority of us thought that there was  something to this term.”
In 2008, Zalasiewicz and 20 other British geologists published an  article in GSA Today, the magazine of the Geological Society of  America, that asked: “Are we now living in the Anthropocene?” The  answer, the group concluded, was probably yes: “Sufficient evidence has  emerged of stratigraphically significant change (both elapsed and  imminent) for recognition of the Anthropocene... as a new geological  epoch to be considered for formalization.” (An epoch, in geological  terms, is a relatively short span of time; a period, like the  Cretaceous, can last for tens of millions of years, and an era, like the  Mesozoic, for hundreds of millions.) The group pointed to changes in  sedimentation rates, in ocean chemistry, in the climate, and in the  global distribution of plants and animals as phenomena that would all  leave lasting traces. Increasing carbon dioxide levels in the  atmosphere, the group wrote, are predicted to lead to “global  temperatures not encountered since the Tertiary,” the period that ended  2.6 million years ago.
Zalasiewicz now heads of the Anthropocene Working Group of the ICS,  which is looking into whether a new epoch should be officially  designated, and if so, how. Traditionally, the boundaries between  geological time periods have been established on the basis of changes in  the fossil record — by, for example, the appearance of one type of  commonly preserved organism or the disappearance of another. The process  of naming the various periods and their various subsets is often quite  contentious; for years, geologists have debated whether the Quaternary —  the geological period that includes both the Holocene and its  predecessor, the Pleistocene — ought to exist, or if the term ought to  be abolished, in which case the Holocene and Pleistocene would become  epochs of the Neogene, which began some 23 million years ago. (Just last  year, the ICS decided to keep the Quaternary, but to push back its  boundary by almost a million years.)
In recent decades, the ICS has been trying to standardize the  geological time scale by choosing a rock sequence in a particular place  to serve as a marker. Thus, for example, the marker for the Calabrian  stage of the Pleistocene can be found at 39.0385°N 17.1348°E, which is  in the toe of the boot of Italy.
Since there is no rock record yet of the Anthropocene, its boundary  would obviously have to be marked in a different way. The epoch could be  said simply to have begun at a certain date, say 1800. Or its onset  could be correlated to the first atomic tests, in the 1940s, which left  behind a permanent record in the form of radioactive isotopes.
One argument against the idea that a new human-dominated epoch has  recently begun is that humans have been changing the planet for a long  time already, indeed practically since the start of the Holocene. People  have been farming for 8,000 or 9,000 years, and some scientists — most  notably William Ruddiman, of the University of Virginia — have proposed  that this development already represents an impact on a geological  scale. Alternatively, it could be argued that the Anthropocene has not  yet arrived because human impacts on the planet are destined to be even  greater 50 or a hundred years from now.
“We’re still now debating whether we’ve actually got to the event  horizon, because potentially what’s going to happen in the 21st century  could be even more significant,” observed Mark Williams, a member of the  Anthropocene Working Group who is also a geologist at the University of  Leicester.
In general, Williams said, the reaction that the working group had  received to its efforts so far has been positive. “Most of the  geologists and stratigraphers that we’ve spoken with think it’s a very  good idea in that they agree that the degree of change is very  significant.”
Zalasiewicz said that even if new epoch is not formally designated,  the exercise of considering it was still useful. “Really it’s a piece of  science,” he said. “We’re trying to get some handle on the scale of  contemporary change in its very largest context.” 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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