The Anthropocene Epoch: Adding Humans to the Chart of Geologic Time

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On August 29, 2016, the Anthropocene Working Group (AWG)—a special body first convened in 2009 to advise the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) on the possibility of formally adding the Anthropocene as an interval to the official chart of geologic time—concluded a series of fateful votes at the 35th International Geological Congress, in South Africa. The AWG, which was made up of 35 scientists, settled on the notion of adding the Anthropocene Epoch to the International Chronostratigraphic Chart. They also suggested that the new interval’s start date be the year 1950, a time in which plutonium isotopes from nuclear fallout would be concentrated enough to serve as an observable signal in rock strata worldwide.

The Anthropocene is characterized as the time in which the collective activities of human beings (Homo sapiens) were so great that they began to alter Earth’s surface, atmosphere, oceans, and systems of nutrient cycling in very significant ways. Certainly, the signs are already apparent. The human population has grown from about 1.6 billion in 1900 to 2.5 billion in 1950 to 7.4 billion in 2016. Much of the arable land has been turned from forests, steppes, prairies, and other land types to agriculture, ranching, and residential areas. Concentrations of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases continue to rise, raising Earth’s average surface temperature and contributing to the lowering of the pH of the oceans.

Some geologists and other scientists might argue that the Holocene Epoch—the interval in which we currently reside (well, formally, for now)—was designated to account for the emergence of humanity as a force on Earth’s landscape. The Holocene’s onset nearly 12,000 years ago also had the convenience of coinciding with the ending of the most-recent ice age. These scientists worry that plopping the upstart Anthropocene into the chart will cause problems in geological research—since many papers already published classify emergent landscapes and recently developed soils as artifacts of the Holocene. They also worry that the apparent rush to declare the onset of a new interval might be a bit premature, arguing that the real effects that humans are having on the planet will not be fully known for hundreds of years. Some proponents of formalizing the Anthropocene note that making the epoch real would support efforts to build greater awareness of the damage humans and their collective activities are doing to the planet.

At any rate, the AWG vote was not the final word on the matter. The Anthropocene remains an informal span of time. In order to be formally and fully welcomed into the chart, both the International Commission on Stratigraphy and the greater International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) will need to have votes of their own. Before these votes can take place, however, geologists will need to find an appropriate location to place the epoch’s “golden spike”—that is, the Global Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP)—defining the base of the Anthropocene. This official marker separates the rocks and soil above it from those belonging to the Holocene. In July 2018, the ICS ratified a proposal to divide the Holocene into three stages: the Greenlandian stage (11,700 to 8,200 years ago), the Northgrippian stage (8,200 to 4,200 years ago), and the Meghalayan stage (4,200 years ago to the present), with GSSPs separating one stage from another. This development came as a shock to many members of the AWG and the geological community, intensifying a debate between those agitating for the formalization of the Anthropocene and those agitating against. Geologists expect that it will take a few more years before a final vote is put before the IUGS to either make formal the stages of the Holocene or give part of it over to the creation of the Anthropocene Epoch.