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The Anthropocene: a geomorphological and sedimentary view

The Anthropocene: a geomorphological and sedimentary view
The Anthropocene: a geomorphological and sedimentary view
The ‘‘Anthropocene’’, as used to describe the interval of recent Earth history during which humans have had an ‘‘overwhelming’’ effect on the Earth system, is now being formally considered as a possible new geological Epoch.Such a new geological time interval (possibly equivalent to the Pleistocene Epoch) requires both theoretical justification as well as empirical evidence preserved within the geological record. Since the geological record is driven by geomorphological processes, geomorphology has to be an integral part of this consideration given that it is Earth-surface processes that produce terrestrial and near-shore stratigraphy. This paper sets a priori considerations concerning the possible formalisation of the Anthropocene from a geomorphological perspective, including the recognition of human dominance in sedimentary transport systems, the boundary problem, and the spatial diachrony of ‘‘anthropogenic geomorphology’’.
earth-surface processes, sediment transport, fluvial geomorphology, alluviation
909-914
Springer
Brown, A.G.
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
Rocha, R.
Pais, J.
Kullberg, J.
Finney, S.
Brown, A.G.
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
Rocha, R.
Pais, J.
Kullberg, J.
Finney, S.

Brown, A.G. (2014) The Anthropocene: a geomorphological and sedimentary view. In, Rocha, R., Pais, J., Kullberg, J. and Finney, S. (eds.) STRATI 2013. Cham. Springer, pp. 909-914. (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-04364-7_171).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

The ‘‘Anthropocene’’, as used to describe the interval of recent Earth history during which humans have had an ‘‘overwhelming’’ effect on the Earth system, is now being formally considered as a possible new geological Epoch.Such a new geological time interval (possibly equivalent to the Pleistocene Epoch) requires both theoretical justification as well as empirical evidence preserved within the geological record. Since the geological record is driven by geomorphological processes, geomorphology has to be an integral part of this consideration given that it is Earth-surface processes that produce terrestrial and near-shore stratigraphy. This paper sets a priori considerations concerning the possible formalisation of the Anthropocene from a geomorphological perspective, including the recognition of human dominance in sedimentary transport systems, the boundary problem, and the spatial diachrony of ‘‘anthropogenic geomorphology’’.

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Published date: 24 April 2014
Keywords: earth-surface processes, sediment transport, fluvial geomorphology, alluviation
Organisations: Palaeoenvironment Laboratory (PLUS)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 381006
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/381006
PURE UUID: 77f649e0-6d28-45f8-8a21-f61c03e7f1b8
ORCID for A.G. Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1990-4654

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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2015 11:08
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:53

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Contributors

Author: A.G. Brown ORCID iD
Editor: R. Rocha
Editor: J. Pais
Editor: J. Kullberg
Editor: S. Finney

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