Alejandro Cearreta
Paleontologist at the University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU, director of the geology department and member of the former Anthropocene Working Group
The term ‘Anthropocene’ was proposed a few years ago as a new geological interval that highlights the transformative changes in the earth's surface caused by human activity. It quickly entered the collective imagination as a synonym for environmental impact, climate change and ecological crisis on a global scale. Although it has been pointed out on numerous occasions that the Anthropocene does not represent the earliest geological evidence of human activity, it is the result of rapid population growth, expansion of the global economy, intensive use of energy and natural resources, and industrialisation. The combined impact of these factors became, from the mid-20th century, a global and almost synchronous phenomenon, known as the ‘Great Acceleration’.
The Anthropocene Working Group (AWG) was established in 2009 to assess the potential of this concept as a new and final interval on the Geological Time Scale. After years of publications, discussions and voting, the AWG concluded in 2023 that the Anthropocene has a sound scientific basis. However, last March, the International Union of Geological Sciences did not agree to formalise it as a unit of geological time.
In this new study, Kuwae and his collaborators have set out to determine a globally valid date for the onset of this human transformation of the Earth system, based on a comprehensive analysis of numerous geological markers in 137 records from around the globe that reflect with high chronological accuracy the last 7,700 years of human influence on the environment. These markers include man-made radionuclides from atomic testing in the atmosphere, persistent organic and inorganic pollutants, microplastics and fossil remains of invasive species transported, either voluntarily or accidentally, to different ecosystems on all continents.
The authors conclude that, although humanity began to significantly and progressively modify the earth's surface with the onset of agricultural societies thousands of years ago in the Neolithic, the European colonisation of the Americas in the 15th century or the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century, the unprecedented increase in the global human footprint began in 1952. This year coincides with the beginning of the Great Acceleration, a period in which the natural processes and cycles of the Earth system were rapidly and intensely transformed. In line with the AWG, this study notes that humans have become a geological and planetary force since the mid-20th century, leaving numerous and varied anthropogenic footprints in geological strata across the planet.