Are we now living in the Anthropocene
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Abstract
The term Anthropocene, proposed and increasingly employed to denote the current interval of anthropogenic global environmental change, may be discussed on stratigraphic grounds. A case can be made for its consideration as a formal epoch in that, since the start of the Industrial Revolution, Earth has endured changes sufficient to leave a global stratigraphic signature distinct from that of the Holocene or of previous Pleistocene interglacial phases, encompassing novel biotic, sedimentary, and geochemical change. These changes, although likely only in their initial phases, are sufficiently distinct and robustly established for suggestions of a Holocene-Anthropocene boundary in the recent historical past to be…
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Authors
21Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Anthropocene
- Holocene
- Geology
- Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point
- Paleontology
- Sedimentary rock
- Epoch (astronomy)
- Global change
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Life in Land
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