Leaders | Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow
Worry not about when the Anthropocene began, but how it might end
It is by their beginnings that the ages of the Earth are known.
[snip]
In 2009 the Anthropocene working group of the Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy was charged with deciding whether the Earth’s transformation at human hands was significant enough to declare the beginning of a new epoch. In 2016 the working group answered “Yes”, and said that it began in the mid-20th century. On July 11th this year it announced that it had chosen the bit of rock that should be taken as marking this beginning. It is a layer of sediment laid down in Crawford Lake, near Toronto, in 1950, shortly after the start of the nuclear age.
[snip]
Alas, it is easy—perhaps too easy—to imagine instead an
Anthropocene which is nasty, brutish and short. The nuclear weapons whose
testing produced the telltale layers of fallout in Crawford Lake still abound.
At some point a geopolitical rupture will see them used, possibly one
exacerbated by the environmental catastrophes caused by Anthropocene excess.
K3, president, stellarcorp.tv