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Journal of Quaternary Science

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde ene. 1986 / hasta dic. 2023 Wiley Online Library

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0267-8179

ISSN electrónico

1099-1417

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Tabla de contenidos

The Anthropocene as an Event, not an Epoch

Philip GibbardORCID; Michael WalkerORCID; Andrew Bauer; Matthew Edgeworth; Lucy Edwards; Erle Ellis; Stanley Finney; Jacquelyn L. Gill; Mark Maslin; Dorothy Merritts; William Ruddiman

<jats:title>ABSTRACT</jats:title><jats:p>Over the course of the last decade the concept of the Anthropocene has become widely established within and beyond the geoscientific literature but its boundaries remain undefined. Formal definition of the Anthropocene as a chronostratigraphical series and geochronological epoch following the Holocene, at a fixed horizon and with a precise global start date, has been proposed, but fails to account for the diachronic nature of human impacts on global environmental systems during the late Quaternary. By contrast, defining the Anthropocene as an ongoing geological <jats:italic>event</jats:italic> more closely reflects the reality of both historical and ongoing human–environment interactions, encapsulating spatial and temporal heterogeneity, as well as diverse social and environmental processes that characterize anthropogenic global changes. Thus, an Anthropocene Event incorporates a substantially wider range of anthropogenic environmental and cultural effects, while at the same time applying more readily in different academic contexts than would be the case with a rigidly defined Anthropocene Series/Epoch.</jats:p>

Pp. 395-399

Invite the Human(ities) to the Anthropocene

Ida‐Maria Chvostek

Pp. 459-460

The Humanities are invited to the Anthropocene Event but not to the Anthropocene Series/Epoch: a response to Chvostek (2023)

Stanley C. FinneyORCID; Philip L. GibbardORCID

Pp. 461-462