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The geomorphology of The Anthropocene: emergence, status and implications

The geomorphology of The Anthropocene: emergence, status and implications
The geomorphology of The Anthropocene: emergence, status and implications
The Anthropocene is proposed as a new interval of geological time in which human influence on Earth and its geological record dominates over natural processes. A major challenge in demarcating the Anthropocene is that the balance between human-influenced and natural processes varies over spatial and temporal scales owing to the inherent variability of both human activities (as associated with culture and modes of development) and natural drivers (e.g. tectonic activity and sea level variation). Against this backdrop, we consider how geomorphology might contribute towards the Anthropocene debate focussing on human impact on aeolian, fluvial, cryospheric and coastal process domains, and how evidence of this impact is preserved in landforms and sedimentary records. We also consider the evidence for an explicitly anthropogenic geomorphology that includes artificial slopes and other human-created landforms. This provides the basis for discussing the theoretical and practical contributions that geomorphology can make to defining an Anthropocene stratigraphy. It is clear that the relevance of the Anthropocene concept varies considerably amongst different branches of geomorphology, depending on the history of human actions in different process domains. For example, evidence of human dominance is more widespread in fluvial and coastal records than in aeolian and cryospheric records, so geomorphologically the Anthropocene would inevitably comprise a highly diachronous lower boundary. Even to identify this lower boundary, research would need to focus on the disambiguation of human effects on geomorphological and sedimentological signatures. This would require robust data, derived from a combination of modelling and new empirical work rather than an arbitrary ‘war of possible boundaries’ associated with convenient, but disputed, 'golden spikes’. Rather than being drawn into stratigraphical debates, the primary concern of geomorphology should be with the investigation of processes and landform development, so providing the underpinning science for the study of this time of critical geological transition.
anthropogenic, aeolian, fluvial, coastal, cryosphere
0197-9337
71-90
Brown, A.G.
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
Tooth, S.T.
7e293e59-c578-4a98-97dc-c159513d04f6
Bullard, J.E.
5bf62869-6bd6-455f-a662-3d67b85180fe
Chriverrell, R.C.
72da26f7-8bd1-45ec-9298-1af59c9cd4a9
Plater, A.J.
799c3c67-9082-4836-afb8-c9148125facd
Murton, J.
e360cec8-e393-467d-9048-67830603565c
Thorndycraft, V.
82bf8c82-e204-454c-8f5f-81861ff16f69
Tarolli, P.
721935fe-9cac-4ebc-ac66-fca48c09b465
Rose, J.
0531a2b1-9897-48a3-84c0-0ba4618de24e
Wainwright, J.
b1469599-d09e-483d-af82-805e680c83a5
Downs, P.
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Aalto, R.
a4e3d1b8-6856-4ebc-9628-206387db07b9
Brown, A.G.
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
Tooth, S.T.
7e293e59-c578-4a98-97dc-c159513d04f6
Bullard, J.E.
5bf62869-6bd6-455f-a662-3d67b85180fe
Chriverrell, R.C.
72da26f7-8bd1-45ec-9298-1af59c9cd4a9
Plater, A.J.
799c3c67-9082-4836-afb8-c9148125facd
Murton, J.
e360cec8-e393-467d-9048-67830603565c
Thorndycraft, V.
82bf8c82-e204-454c-8f5f-81861ff16f69
Tarolli, P.
721935fe-9cac-4ebc-ac66-fca48c09b465
Rose, J.
0531a2b1-9897-48a3-84c0-0ba4618de24e
Wainwright, J.
b1469599-d09e-483d-af82-805e680c83a5
Downs, P.
110bdd18-2260-476a-9afe-f9520549aa90
Aalto, R.
a4e3d1b8-6856-4ebc-9628-206387db07b9

Brown, A.G., Tooth, S.T., Bullard, J.E., Chriverrell, R.C., Plater, A.J., Murton, J., Thorndycraft, V., Tarolli, P., Rose, J., Wainwright, J., Downs, P. and Aalto, R. (2017) The geomorphology of The Anthropocene: emergence, status and implications. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 42 (1), 71-90. (doi:10.1002/esp.3943).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Anthropocene is proposed as a new interval of geological time in which human influence on Earth and its geological record dominates over natural processes. A major challenge in demarcating the Anthropocene is that the balance between human-influenced and natural processes varies over spatial and temporal scales owing to the inherent variability of both human activities (as associated with culture and modes of development) and natural drivers (e.g. tectonic activity and sea level variation). Against this backdrop, we consider how geomorphology might contribute towards the Anthropocene debate focussing on human impact on aeolian, fluvial, cryospheric and coastal process domains, and how evidence of this impact is preserved in landforms and sedimentary records. We also consider the evidence for an explicitly anthropogenic geomorphology that includes artificial slopes and other human-created landforms. This provides the basis for discussing the theoretical and practical contributions that geomorphology can make to defining an Anthropocene stratigraphy. It is clear that the relevance of the Anthropocene concept varies considerably amongst different branches of geomorphology, depending on the history of human actions in different process domains. For example, evidence of human dominance is more widespread in fluvial and coastal records than in aeolian and cryospheric records, so geomorphologically the Anthropocene would inevitably comprise a highly diachronous lower boundary. Even to identify this lower boundary, research would need to focus on the disambiguation of human effects on geomorphological and sedimentological signatures. This would require robust data, derived from a combination of modelling and new empirical work rather than an arbitrary ‘war of possible boundaries’ associated with convenient, but disputed, 'golden spikes’. Rather than being drawn into stratigraphical debates, the primary concern of geomorphology should be with the investigation of processes and landform development, so providing the underpinning science for the study of this time of critical geological transition.

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Brown et al ESP & L accept Feb 9th 2016.pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 February 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 March 2016
Published date: January 2017
Keywords: anthropogenic, aeolian, fluvial, coastal, cryosphere
Organisations: Palaeoenvironment Laboratory (PLUS)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 387226
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/387226
ISSN: 0197-9337
PURE UUID: 52142629-0f54-499f-b937-974cf5dd0fbe
ORCID for A.G. Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1990-4654

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Date deposited: 17 Feb 2016 12:18
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:27

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Contributors

Author: A.G. Brown ORCID iD
Author: S.T. Tooth
Author: J.E. Bullard
Author: R.C. Chriverrell
Author: A.J. Plater
Author: J. Murton
Author: V. Thorndycraft
Author: P. Tarolli
Author: J. Rose
Author: J. Wainwright
Author: P. Downs
Author: R. Aalto

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