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Anthropocene

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‘The Anthropocene’ is a newly proposed geological time unit: the age of humans. The term was suggested in the year 2000 in the middle of a committee meeting by Paul Crutzen, a Nobel prize-winning atmospheric geochemist (carrying on the grand tradition started by William Smith of contributing a fundamental change to the discipline of geology from outside its heady ranks).

Tokyo Sky Tree
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Tokyo Sky Tree, Tokyo: a likely future Anthropocene deposit and a present-day Anthropocene processing mill. Β© Terence Starkey/Unsplash.

Shortly afterwards, a group of stratigraphers β€” gatekeepers of Earth chronology β€” led by Jan Zalasiewicz (a one-time BGS palaeontologist now based at the University of Leicester) developed the (AWG). The AWG was ratified in 2008 as a formal component of the Subcommision on Quaternary Stratigraphy within the . It was charged with assessing whether there is a geological case for the existence of the Anthropocene.

Made ground on the coast of Mahe, Seychelles
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Reclaimed land along the eastern coast of Mahe, Seychelles. Β© Gareth Jenkins.

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Since then, the Anthropocene has made it to the cover of The Economist (, May, 2011); the concept (called ‘Nature Is Over’) was included in Time ³Ύ²Ή²΅²Ή³ϊΎ±²Τ±π of 2012; it has featured in the farrago of art, architecture and geology in the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, in 2014, and become a feature documentary film in 2018, ‘Anthropocene: The Human Epoch‘, from the multiple-award winning team of Jennifer Baichwal, Nicholas de Pencier and Edward Burtynsky. A Google Scholar search will reveal close to 150Μύ000 results; three new academic journals have formed as a direct consequence of the concept, and the idea has attracted philosophers, political scientists, sociologists, environmental historians, bloggers, journalists, lawyers and even other geologists.

In 2016, the AWG presented the preliminary summary of evidence and interim recommendations at the 35th International Geological Congress in Cape Town, South Africa. Together with results of voting by members of the AWG, the majority held the Anthropocene to be stratigraphically real and recommends formalisation at epoch/series rank based on a mid-20th century boundary.

Anthropocene sediment
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Plastic and other waste acting as a human-made, Anthropocene sediment. Β© Antoine Giret/Unsplash.

It probably fair to say that no single geological phenomenon has resonated in so many communities, with so many people, and in so many different ways. The discovery of plate tectonics was the last time geology made a significant change to our understanding of how the earth works. The Anthropocene is no less significant.

Here at the BGS, a lot of our work is inevitably about Anthropocene processes and the generation of Anthropocene materials. The role of humans as geological agents and agents of environmental change is front and centre within the portfolio of BGS Global projects, all of which are carried out in the context of the UN Sustainability Development Goals and driven by the UK Office of Development Assistance guidelines. See 51ΑΤΖζ Global for more information.

Potential Anthropocene deposit
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Consolidated waste paper destined for a landfill, which may eventually become an Anthropocene deposit. Β© Bas Emmen/Unsplash.

(film).

Ellis, M A. 2018. , Research Features, Vol. 125, 6–9.

Ellis, M A, and Trachtenberg, Z. 2013. ΜύEarth Future, Vol. 2, 122–125.

Thomas, J A, and Ellis, M A. 2020 (in press). . Environmental History.

Waters, C N, Zalasiewicz, J, Summerhayes, C, Barnosky, A D, Poirier, C,Μύ GaΕ‚uszka,Μύ A, Cearreta, A, Edgeworth, M, Ellis, E C, Ellis, M, Jeandel, C, Leinfelder, R, McNeill, J R, Richtern, D dB, Steffen, W, Syvitski, J, Vidas, D, Wagreich, M, Williams, M, Zhisheng, A, Grinevald, J, Odada, E, Oreskes, N, and Wolfe, A J. 2016. ΜύScience, Vol. 351(6269).

Zalasiewicz, J, Waters, C N, Summerhayes, C P, Wolfe, A P, Barnosky, A D, Cearreta, A, Crutzen, P, Ellis, E, Fairchild, I J, GaΕ‚uszka,Μύ A, Haff, P, Hajdas, I, Head, M J, Ivar do Sul, J A, Jeandel, C, Leinfelder, R, McNeill, J R, Neal, C, Odada, E, Oreskes, N, Steffen, W, Syvitski, J, Vidas, D, Wagreich, M, and Williams, M. 2017. .ΜύAnthropocene, Vol. 19, 55–60.

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