Extraordinary Human Energy Consumption and Resultant Geological Impacts Beginning Around 1950 CE Initiated the Proposed Anthropocene Epoch
Date
2020-10-16Author
Syvitski, Jaia
Waters, Colin N.
Day, John
Milliman, John D.
Summerhayes, Colin P.
Steffen, Will
Zalasiewicz, Jan
Cearreta Bilbao, Alejandro
Galuszka, Agnieszka
Hajdas, Irka
Head, Martin J.
Leinfelder, Reinhold
McNeill, J. R.
Poirier, Clement
Rose, Neil L.
Shotyk, William
Wagreich, Michael
Williams, Mark
Metadata
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Communications Earth & Environment 1(1) : (2020) // Article ID 32
Abstract
Growth in fundamental drivers-energy use, economic productivity and population-can provide quantitative indications of the proposed boundary between the Holocene Epoch and the Anthropocene. Human energy expenditure in the Anthropocene, similar to 22 zetajoules (ZJ), exceeds that across the prior 11,700 years of the Holocene (similar to 14.6 ZJ), largely through combustion of fossil fuels. The global warming effect during the Anthropocene is more than an order of magnitude greater still. Global human population, their productivity and energy consumption, and most changes impacting the global environment, are highly correlated. This extraordinary outburst of consumption and productivity demonstrates how the Earth System has departed from its Holocene state since similar to 1950 CE, forcing abrupt physical, chemical and biological changes to the Earth's stratigraphic record that can be used to justify the proposal for naming a new epoch-the Anthropocene.
Human energy consumption and productivity have steeply risen around 1950 CE, leading to a departure from the Earth's Holocene state into the Anthropocene, suggests a quantitative analysis of humanity's influence on the Earth system.