It’s Not Just Global Warming, Folks, as Humanity Enters New Anthropocene Epoch
Human activity has led to profound changes on the Earth, including that of carbon dioxide emissions causing global warming and the subsequent rise of sea levels, widespread species extinction and land transformation due to deforestation, indicating the end of the Holocene era, said to have begun some 12,000 years ago. "The Anthropocene marks a new period in which our collective activities dominate the planetary machinery," said Chris Rapley, former director of the Science Museum in London, now a climate scientist at University College London. Although Crutzen claims that the name change is overdue, marking significant changes in the geological time scale requires strong evidence.
In order to define the new Anthropocene era, indicators, including levels of radioactive elements in the stratosphere from nuclear bomb tests, unburned hydrocarbons from power stations and other fossil-fuel combustion sources, the ubiquitous slowly degrading plastic pollution swirling in the oceans, atmospheric aluminium and concrete particulates, as well as excessive nitrogen and phosphate in soils are to be considered as evidence, said Zalasiewicz. As for species, the spread of some, rather than the mass extinctions of many others, can serve as a useful tool for designating the Anthropocene. The global ubiquity of the domestic chicken, for example, is likely to be a metric in defining the advent of the Anthropocene.
Comments
Post a Comment