Enter Anthropocene: Searching for Signals in New Orleans

in anthropocene •  5 years ago 

Geologic time is vast and incomplete. Scientists can look at the stratigraphy of rock record and ascertain a great wealth of information about the history of our planet, but any single outcrop or section of layers will not tell the complete story. Subtle nuances and great unconformities exist between the rocks from one location to the next. Never discouraged, geologists at the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) have managed to come together and agree on distinguishable boundaries to differentiate geologic periods, epochs, and ages. The reference boundary is referred to as the GSSP or Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point. This point and associated stratigraphy becomes globally recognized as the lower marker of a given geologic time division.


An example GSSP from Australia for the Ediacaran Period, boundary marked with a golden spike. Photo by Bahudhara, modified under CC-BY-SA 3.0

In the dynamic times that we live in, the planet has been rapidly transformed by human activity. These changes are significant enough that the ICS and the Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy (SQS) created a working group to debate whether these changes signify the boundary of a new geologic time period – the Anthropocene. The folks tasked with debating the Anthropocene are known as the Anthropocene Working Group (AWG). This aggregate of geologists, stratigraphers, geochemists, and many other subdiciplines assist with deciding the future of geologic time, and have been doing so for a decade now.


Logo of the Anthropocene Working Group, originally found Here and modified under Fair Use laws. The AWG chose to use the infamous 'hockey stick' diagram to symbolically represent the Anthropocene despite the fact that the uptick in CO2 levels that is represented by this chart started a century before the proposed 'atomic Anthropocene' border discussed below.

Enter the Anthropocene

The 2019 meeting of the AWG took place in early November at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. The timing of this meeting coincided with a larger conference on the Anthropocene involving students, artists, and scientists from around the world. I first journeyed to New Orleans to attend the conference as a guide to a group of paddlers that traversed the entirety of the Mississippi River Valley. Along the paddle journey I was invited to attend the AWG meeting that would kick off the conference. Never wanting to miss out on a good geologic discussion, I bought an outfit new to my standard paddling attire and prepared for two days of rock talks in the city of Mardi Gras.


Where Mardi Gras floats live the rest of the year. How many iconic symbols of the Anthropocene can you identify? Photo by the author.

When did it begin?

At a previous gathering of the AWG in 2016, the majority of attendees (88%) voted that the Anthropocene is stratigraphically real at the magnitude of an Epoch and best represented by the atomic radiation spikes found globally in stratigraphic records from the early 1950s and 1960s. In particular, the presence of plutonium-239 following atmospheric bomb testing around 1952 seems to be the most globally recognizable primary marker and is favored by the group. Bomb testing during this time propelled radioactive dust high into the upper atmosphere, allowing it to settle back down virtually everywhere on the planet.


Mushroom cloud from 'Ivy Mike', the first successful H-Bomb detonated on November 1st, 1952. Radioactive debris from this explosion reached the upper atmosphere and was dispersed globally. Photo from The Official CTBTO Photostream, modified under CC-BY-2.0

The 1952 date for the Anthropocene is met with contention from at least one landscape ecologist in attendance, outspoken in his views on such a 'late' date for the start of the Anthropocene. Indeed there are many other stratigraphic markers long before the plutonium-239 spike, such as evidence of human agricultural activity in the soil record, that could also be used as indicators of the Anthropocene. However, the geochronological basis for the GSSP was decided by majority vote in 2016 and so the debate is secondary to the current work of the group. It should be noted that the landscape ecologist was one of four individuals that voted against this basis in 2016.


The metaphorical wildfire, more common than ever due to climate change and the forgotten practice of prescribed burning; this from the California Rim Fire of 2017. Image from US Department of Agriculture, modified under Public Domain

Candidate Sites

During the course of the two-day 2019 AWG meeting, the primary objective was to hear presentations from researchers of candidate GSSP sites and consider which sites hold the most promise for representing the boundary of the Anthropocene on a global scale. The AWG works in partner with two German groups (the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science , and Haus der Kulturen der Welt) and will be able to offer some support to the chosen GSSP candidate to assist in their research and establish the formal stratigraphic boundary of the Anthropocene.

There are a variety of localities being considered as potential GSSP candidate sites for the Anthropocene, and the AWG is actively soliciting nominations for GSSP candidate sites. The primary requirement is that the location clearly captures plutonium-239 in a reliable stratigraphic sequence, though an additional requirement is the existence of prior research data. Candidate sites can be soil sections from bays, reservoirs, lakes, seas, and peat bogs, as well as other stratigraphic sequences like cores from ice, trees, speleothems, and coral.


Caves are protected environments and their mineral deposits are constantly growing, making them a great habitat for a candidate site. Speleothems are cave mineral formations like stalactites and stalagmites. Photo modified from source under Pixabay License.

Secondary Signals

The AWG meeting inspired several heated discussions about the concept of primary and secondary signals of the Anthropocene. Many consider the presence of microplastics, concrete, and other novel materials in the sediment as an indicator of the Anthropocene that predates the primary plutonium-239 marker. Likewise, concepts such as the spread of invasive species and the presence of soot from the burning of coal also make good secondary markers of the Anthropocene. The main issues with using these as primary markers are that they are not globally present in the sediment record and do not offer as precise of a geochronological timer as plutonium-239.

Each potential record source has drawbacks and redeeming qualities. For example, cores from ice, coral, trees, and speleothems are unlikely to contain novel materials but they are all relatively stable. A living organism has never before been used as a GSSP, so coral and trees would be unprecedented. Sediment records from bogs, bays, lakes, reservoirs, and seas hold great potential but they are not yet lithified and thus are difficult to sample while prone to loss, compaction, and distortion. The inherent stability associated with GSSPs in the rock record is not as certain when considering unconsolidated strata.


At the boundary between consolidated and unconsolidated, which one stands tall? Photo modified from source under Pixabay License.

Uncertainty

The uncertainty involved with selecting a GSSP for the Anthropocene extends beyond the drawbacks of candidate sites. While plutonium-239 offers an ideal layer to make as the base of stratigraphy for the Anthropocene, there is plenty of evidence that humans were impacting the sediment record far earlier than 1952. In addition, we cannot know the extent to which we will change the planet and the sediment record in the near future. In 500 years, geologists might be tempted to look back and decide that another major event serves as a truer marker of the Anthropocene.

Fortunately, there is a mechanism that is built into the concept of geologic time that could allow for a more honest representation of the beginning of the Anthropocene - that of uncertainty. If we are using plutonium-239 as the marker of the beginning of the Anthropocene, the temptation might be to make the date November 2nd, 1952 and the uncertainty of this date to ±1 week or so (the amount of time it took for the radioactive dust from Ivy Mike to have global reach).

If we instead acknowledge that there are indicators in the sediment record far older than this date, we can honor the gradual transition into the atomic Anthropocene with the 1952 date but an uncertainty of ±200 years. This would then cover the mass adoption of the Watt steam engine in the late 1700s, the Industrial Revolution, the introduction of most invasive species, and the vast majority of fossil fuel emissions. It also offers a buffer for the uncertainty of the future and acknowledges the complexity of the issue being debated.


The rapid progress of our past has lasting repercussions felt in the present. Image modified from source under Pixabay License.

Regardless of the questions that remain to be answered involving the Anthropocene, and no matter how long it takes to have the boundary formally recognized, it is clear that we are currently in a new geologic time epoch that is distinguished by evidence of human activity. Something like this should not happen again within any of our lifetimes, and it will not be formally settled for at least a few more years. It's a great time to be a Quaternary geologist, and an even better time to be an anthropomorphic organism. This is our time!

The formal recognition and boundary for the Anthropocene will not fundamentally change what the Anthropocene already is socially. The term has been adopted by all reaches of culture and has taken on a meaning of it's own. However, a formal geologic recognition would influence geologists, archeologists, anthropologists, and other soil scientists as scientific literature would conform to the temporal definition of the boundary. It would be ideal if the geologic recognition of the Anthropocene could eventually lead to a societal recognition of our undeniable impact on the planet and ultimately a modification of our most destructive habits. Let us take care of the planet we live on so we can enjoy it for epochs to come!

All images attributed in captions except the first image taken by the author at Ferne Clyffe State Park in Illinois. See links embedded within the article for more information about a given topic. Welcome to the Anthropocene!
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I started this comment before...that must be floating somewhere in cyberspace.

Anyway...a great blog. I was wondering, is this the first epoch to be observed and recorded contemporaneously--because the changes are so rapid and dramatic? Not a distinction we should take comfort in, is it?

Mind-boggling that we can begin an epoch by marking the time when the earth was first covered with radioactive fallout. I wish everyone would read this blog and be impressed by the solemnity of that fact.

Your work is fascinating...and fun. So important. Please keep us informed. Sharing on Twitter. Hope I think of a catchy phrase to draw more attention :)

The 2nd take is twice as good! Your thoughts are always so insightful.

The only exception might be the Holocene, which is the epoch that we will be in until the Anthropocene becomes formally set...even though we aren't really in the Holocene anymore temporally.

It may have just been a test at the time, but Ivy Mike has definitely had a lasting impact. The rate at which we have altered the planet in the last 300 years definitely merits the distinction, but I agree there is not much comfort to take therein.

Thank you for continually reading and sharing my work. I am grateful to have your support and comments - even the one floating in the cyber-ether!

You are so gracious. I consider it a privilege to read your reports from field and to communicate with you.
Have the most wonderful day. And have fun out there :)

Great... I enjoyed reading this a lot!

So glad that you found it enjoyable! Thanks



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