Claim: The Anthropocene started in the mid 1950s

From the AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY

Determining when humans started impacting the planet on a large scale

Humans have so profoundly altered the Earth that, some scientists argue, our current geologic epoch requires a new name: the Anthropocene. But defining the precise start of the era is tricky. Would it begin with the spread of domesticated farm animals or the appearance of radioactive elements from nuclear bomb tests? Scientists report in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology a method to measure levels of human-made contaminants in sediments that could help pinpoint the Anthropocene’s onset.

The geologic record can sometimes provide clear-cut evidence of epoch changes. For example, when a meteorite collided with Earth 66 million years ago, levels of the metal iridium from the space rock spiked in sediments around the world. This clearly marked the end of the Cretaceous period. However, trying to define the start of the proposed — and much debated — Anthropocene could be more complicated. Human influence over the climate and environment began with the Industrial Revolution in the 1800s, and accelerated dramatically in the second half of the 20th century. Many markers of human impact on the planet from agriculture, waste disposal and other activities have been archived in the planet’s sedimentary records. The rise in industrial chemicals, such as pesticides and pharmaceuticals, is another example of a human-driven activity that has been captured in sediment layers. To explore the record of synthetic compounds as a possible marker to help define the Anthropocene, Aurea C. Chiaia-Hernández, Juliane Hollender and colleagues turned to a new analytical technique combined with sophisticated data analysis to characterize patterns of contamination over time.

The researchers applied high-resolution mass spectrometry to investigate synthetic chemical contamination in two lakes in Central Europe. They examined 1-meter long cores from each lake bottom, capturing the past 100 years of sediment layers. According to the analysis, the lakes’ sediments contained few synthetic contaminants before the 1950s. But during the 1950s, concentrations of industrial chemicals started to appear in the samples, which is consistent with the boom in industrial activities post-World War II. The researchers say this record clearly demonstrates the beginning of large-scale human impact on the environment. It also shows a decline in contamination following the installation of wastewater treatment plants in the 1970s, providing evidence for successful mitigation measures. Additionally, the introduction of new pollutants that are now finding their way into surface waters can be discovered.

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The authors acknowledge funding from the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment, the Swiss National Science Foundation and Eawag.

The paper’s abstract is available here: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.est.7b03357


One has to wonder if with all the pollution controls we have in place globally now, is there any sign of those chemicals that the authors claim signaled the start of the Anthropocene? Would the lack of those chemicals now signal the end of that epoch? It seems quite flimsy to me to base the beginning of entire epoch on a few lakes in Central Europe, especially since those chemical signals may be completely absent from the sediment layers forming now.

 

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October 26, 2017 6:33 pm

If you are going to have a new era the obvious one is about a million years ago when ice started to be deposited in Antarctica. Ice has more or less continued to be formed since then as borne out by the near complete record of core recovered from Vostok. Though Vostok did not bottom in basement, subsequent remote sensing by NASA during Operation IceBridge of Vostok to Dome C in 2013 clearly indicated the existence of an unconformity between the ice and the underlying basement. This is where you can place a ‘Cene boundary if you are so inclined.

Gabro
Reply to  Ian MacCulloch
October 26, 2017 8:24 pm

The East Antarctic Ice Sheet began to be deposited about 34 million years ago. And built up very rapidly in the early Oligocene Epoch. It wasted a bit during the Miocene.

Reply to  Gabro
October 28, 2017 11:35 pm

Gabro – the oldest ice recorded is about 2.7 million years ago. The information was released a couple of months ago from quite shallow depths as well. Known as ‘blue’ ice this part of the ice record offers some amazing insights. The ice record pre 1 million years does seem rather truncated. No date we will see some more data come out in the months ahead.
https://newatlas.com/oldest-ice-core-ever-antarctica/50973/

johchi7
Reply to  Ian MacCulloch
October 29, 2017 12:15 am

https://earth-pages.co.uk/2013/11/27/earths-first-major-glacial-epochs/

You are talking about existing ice and not what existed back 2.7 billion years ago that disappeared and have been replaced with 3 other ice ages that we live in this last one now.. Previous glacial periods have totally disappeared to just traces left of them during the Interglacial Periods between them. That there is as much glacial ice now proves we are still in this ice age and a true Interglacial Period has not happened and with current understanding of the solar minimum that is more than likely going to have another event like the “Little Ice Age” within this century… An Interglacial Period is not happening in any of our lifetime.

October 26, 2017 7:56 pm

Lakes in Central Europe, where the commies ran lots of highly polluting industries after WW2.

October 26, 2017 8:55 pm

Claim: The Anthropocene started in the mid 1950s

I’ll keep it simple:

Bull !

Gabro
Reply to  Robert Kernodle
October 26, 2017 8:59 pm

If by that you mean that there is no Anthropocene, or that it’s the same as the Holocene, then I’ll agree with you.

October 27, 2017 12:52 am

Yes, but Anthropocene was interrupted for 8 years during the Obama presidency. He said so himself.