Anthropocene: What is the next epoch and has Planet Earth entered ?


Nuclear bombs, plastic pollution, smoke from fossil fuels, extinction of species, rising seas, rising temperatures – the list of changes caused by humans is long.

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What is the Anthropocene?

It is a period of geological time that some scientists believe should be formally declared because of the extraordinary impact of humans on the Earth.

Why do they think that?

In the last century, humans have caused changes to the entire planet on a par with other natural ones that left a discernible mark in the stratification of rocks and which geologists used to demarcate the transition from one time to another.

What kind of changes?

Global warming by an average of one degree Celsius since about 1880, rising sea levels, the spread of species around the world, smoke from fossil fuel burning, plastic waste, radioactive particles from nuclear bomb explosions, and changes to the Earth’s chemistry, among others.

When did the Anthropocene start?

This is still being debated but experts believe sometime in the mid-20th century, partly because this is when a layer of radioactive particles from nuclear bombs was spread all over the world.

Where does the name come from?

Anthropocene combines the Greek word for human, anthropo-, with “cene”, from the ancient Greek kainos, meaning new. All of the epochs within Earth’s current era, the Cenozoic, which began 65 million years ago, have been given -cene endings.

Why are we talking about this?

Scientists in the Anthropocene Working Group have just recommended the adoption of the Anthropocene as a new epoch – replacing the 11,500-year-old Holocene – after voting by 34 to zero that it is real.

What happens now?

The researchers are expected to look for a symbolic “line in the rock” – or sediment, coral reef or tree rings – that marks the dividing line. The International Union of Geological Sciences will have to agree before the Anthropocene could be formally declared.

Is this a good thing?

On the one hand, geologists formally recognising humanity’s extraordinary impact on the Earth because they can see it will be written in the future rocks of the planet might help persuade remaining doubters of the need to do something about climate change, pollution and other human-caused problems.

On the other, ethicist Professor Clive Hamilton has pointed out this is a concept that “should frighten us”

This could be the official flag of Earth that we’ll plant on Mars


You’re looking at the proposed design for the flag that our intrepid Earthling explorers will plant on the surface of Mars when they hopefully make it there by mid-2030.

The brains behind the design is graphic designer, Oskar Pernefeldt, from Beckmans College of Design in Sweden, who came up with it as part of his graduation project called ‘The International Flag of Planet Earth.’ According to Michael Rundle at Wired, companies such as LG and BSmart helped him formalise his design, and NASA appears to be involved, but it’s not clear exactly how.
While we’re a long way off actually having a discussion, as a global population, about what flag to plant on Mars, and whether there’s actually any point, considering how unlikely it is that anyone else will actually see it, it’s still a pretty fun exercise. It’s a chance for us to consider what things planet Earth would project to someone looking at it from the outside in.

Pernefeldt explains the thinking behind the design:

“Centred in the flag, seven rings form a flower – a symbol of the life on Earth. The rings are linked to each other, which represents how everything on our planet, directly or indirectly, [is] linked.

The blue field represents water which is essential for life – also as the oceans cover most of our planet’s surface. The flower’s outer rings form a circle which could be seen as a symbol of Earth as a planet and the blue surface could represent the Universe.”

Watch the video below to hear Pernefeldt talk about how he came up with the design, and check out the images he’s put together of the flag in a whole bunch of different scenarios. I can’t help but feel a little patriotic about our little blue dot of a planet.SportAntarctica 7

Astronaut portraitPorch flag