The term Anthropocene initially emerged from the Earth System science community in the early 2000s, denoting a concept that the Holocene Epoch has terminated as a consequence of human activities. First associated with the onset of the Industrial Revolution, it was then more closely linked with the Great Acceleration in industrialization and globalization from the 1950s that fundamentally modified physical, chemical, and biological signals in geological archives. Since 2009, the Anthropocene has been evaluated by the Anthropocene Working Group, tasked with examining it for potential inclusion in the Geological Time Scale. Such inclusion requires a precisely defined chronostratigraphic and geochronological unit with a globally synchronous bas...
The extensive array of mid-20th century stratigraphic event signals associated with the ‘Great Accel...
Human activities have left signatures on the Earth for millennials, and these impacts are growing in...
The Anthropocene has yet to be defined in a way that is functional both to the international geologi...
The term Anthropocene initially emerged from the Earth System science community in the early 2000s, ...
The term Anthropocene initially emerged from the Earth System science (ESS) community in the early 2...
Scientists are actively debating whether the Anthropocene, the geologic time span (GTS) we are now l...
Over the course of the last decade the concept of the Anthropocene has become widely established wit...
The Anthropocene defined as an epoch/series within the Geological Time Scale, and with an isochronou...
In recent years, ‘Anthropocene’ has been proposed as an informal stratigraphic term to denote the cu...
A range of published arguments against formalizing the Anthropocene as a geological time unit have v...
The Anthropocene is a new epoch proposed by Crutzen and Stoermer (2000), with a base at 1950 AD or 1...
We analyse the ‘three flaws’ to potentially defining a formal Anthropocene geological time unit as a...
A range of published arguments against formalizing the Anthropocene as a geological time unit have v...
The extensive array of mid-20th century stratigraphic event signals associated with the ‘Great Accel...
Human activities have left signatures on the Earth for millennials, and these impacts are growing in...
The Anthropocene has yet to be defined in a way that is functional both to the international geologi...
The term Anthropocene initially emerged from the Earth System science community in the early 2000s, ...
The term Anthropocene initially emerged from the Earth System science (ESS) community in the early 2...
Scientists are actively debating whether the Anthropocene, the geologic time span (GTS) we are now l...
Over the course of the last decade the concept of the Anthropocene has become widely established wit...
The Anthropocene defined as an epoch/series within the Geological Time Scale, and with an isochronou...
In recent years, ‘Anthropocene’ has been proposed as an informal stratigraphic term to denote the cu...
A range of published arguments against formalizing the Anthropocene as a geological time unit have v...
The Anthropocene is a new epoch proposed by Crutzen and Stoermer (2000), with a base at 1950 AD or 1...
We analyse the ‘three flaws’ to potentially defining a formal Anthropocene geological time unit as a...
A range of published arguments against formalizing the Anthropocene as a geological time unit have v...
The extensive array of mid-20th century stratigraphic event signals associated with the ‘Great Accel...
Human activities have left signatures on the Earth for millennials, and these impacts are growing in...
The Anthropocene has yet to be defined in a way that is functional both to the international geologi...