The "Anthropocene" and "the Present is the Key to the Past"
Publication date
2014
Editors
Rocha, Rogério B.
Pais, João
Kullberg, José Carlos
Finney, Stanley
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Part of book
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Abstract
Here, I share my thinking about the coming into existence of the “Anthropocene” as to-be-formalised chronostratigraphic terminology. I present and frame my preferred meaning for it, and my preferred slot for the interval: as an uppermost unit in the Holocene Series, following the late Holocene. The Anthropocene is more or less synonymous with “the present” and “the now” in modern earth science. It covers the time when observant scientists were around and from which we have more than geology alone on which to base scientific records of Earth (the age of measurement). This happens to coincide with humans becoming a geological factor, mostly because humankind discovered what it could do with geology: change Earth. In that vein, I opt to link the base of the Anthropocene with the appearance in of Lyell’s catchphrase “The Present is the Key to the Past” in the literature, at AD 1830. Defining the exact beginning of the Anthropocene is an arbitrary matter and more or less the same as defining the Present. Linking the definition to Lyell’s key principle makes a point and has benefits.
Keywords
Chronostratigraphy, Anthropocene, Stratigraphy, Philosophy of Nature, industrial revolution, Stratigraphy, Global and Planetary Change, International
Citation
Cohen, K M 2014, The "Anthropocene" and "the Present is the Key to the Past". in R B Rocha, J Pais, J C Kullberg & S Finney (eds), STRATI 2013 : First International Congres on Stratigraphy. At the cutting edge of Stratigraphy. Springer Geology, vol. 45, Springer, pp. 919-923, STRATI 2013, Lisboa, Portugal, 1/07/13. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-04364-7_173, conference