Berliner Boersenzeitung - Canadian lake ground-zero for Anthropocene epoch

EUR -
AED 4.301156
AFN 72.601323
ALL 95.426204
AMD 431.661594
ANG 2.096607
AOA 1074.966542
ARS 1625.345213
AUD 1.613565
AWG 2.109242
AZN 1.972853
BAM 1.955254
BBD 2.358482
BDT 143.739859
BGN 1.955456
BHD 0.441756
BIF 3484.274768
BMD 1.170988
BND 1.490171
BOB 8.091982
BRL 5.769923
BSD 1.170993
BTN 112.009764
BWP 15.775066
BYN 3.262961
BYR 22951.364632
BZD 2.355123
CAD 1.604617
CDF 2605.448961
CHF 0.916062
CLF 0.026462
CLP 1041.617562
CNY 7.953465
CNH 7.947782
COP 4466.967891
CRC 533.060243
CUC 1.170988
CUP 31.031182
CVE 110.236098
CZK 24.332486
DJF 208.527109
DKK 7.472215
DOP 68.920753
DZD 155.060396
EGP 61.970481
ERN 17.56482
ETB 182.841505
FJD 2.559604
FKP 0.865605
GBP 0.866355
GEL 3.126342
GGP 0.865605
GHS 13.27369
GIP 0.865605
GMD 86.063612
GNF 10274.13086
GTQ 8.933505
GYD 244.987861
HKD 9.169954
HNL 31.140304
HRK 7.533783
HTG 152.932516
HUF 358.060608
IDR 20504.760872
ILS 3.408389
IMP 0.865605
INR 112.020283
IQD 1533.971625
IRR 1536336.244201
ISK 143.610339
JEP 0.865605
JMD 185.192748
JOD 0.830242
JPY 184.836922
KES 151.233361
KGS 102.40256
KHR 4697.808451
KMF 491.814758
KPW 1053.908866
KRW 1745.205967
KWD 0.360968
KYD 0.975857
KZT 549.601825
LAK 25662.710082
LBP 104862.650463
LKR 380.040361
LRD 214.296561
LSL 19.280516
LTL 3.457623
LVL 0.708319
LYD 7.415707
MAD 10.734082
MDL 20.082992
MGA 4862.808128
MKD 61.635947
MMK 2458.236249
MNT 4191.755618
MOP 9.445944
MRU 46.808728
MUR 54.813722
MVR 18.032835
MWK 2030.784913
MXN 20.141777
MYR 4.602567
MZN 74.837549
NAD 19.280516
NGN 1604.991758
NIO 43.087967
NOK 10.746153
NPR 179.222307
NZD 1.973828
OMR 0.450241
PAB 1.171013
PEN 4.014679
PGK 5.1754
PHP 71.957799
PKR 326.205876
PLN 4.249163
PYG 7161.000228
QAR 4.269181
RON 5.209375
RSD 117.376348
RUB 86.037989
RWF 1717.271765
SAR 4.399954
SBD 9.401873
SCR 16.396972
SDG 703.171687
SEK 10.913901
SGD 1.490217
SHP 0.874261
SLE 28.835575
SLL 24555.035151
SOS 669.233114
SRD 43.553759
STD 24237.087207
STN 24.493578
SVC 10.246139
SYP 129.486637
SZL 19.273276
THB 37.925375
TJS 10.966319
TMT 4.098458
TND 3.411347
TOP 2.819458
TRY 53.182322
TTD 7.944917
TWD 36.913636
TZS 3041.817172
UAH 51.493281
UGX 4390.848811
USD 1.170988
UYU 46.517804
UZS 14222.271218
VES 590.509993
VND 30853.191598
VUV 138.151844
WST 3.164874
XAF 655.790666
XAG 0.013229
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.164654
XCG 2.110393
XDR 0.813801
XOF 655.754275
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.455807
ZAR 19.232893
ZMK 10540.304397
ZMW 22.102488
ZWL 377.057655
  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    23.07

    -0.17%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.55

    -0.21%

  • BP

    -0.3000

    44.1

    -0.68%

  • GSK

    0.0750

    50.975

    +0.15%

  • AZN

    1.5110

    186.051

    +0.81%

  • RIO

    2.5700

    112.07

    +2.29%

  • BTI

    1.4050

    65.045

    +2.16%

  • BCE

    -0.0550

    24.415

    -0.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.1200

    16.2

    +0.74%

  • BCC

    -2.1050

    65.825

    -3.2%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    86.9

    -0.39%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.12

    -0.15%

  • VOD

    0.4450

    15.54

    +2.86%

  • RELX

    -1.2750

    31.495

    -4.05%

Canadian lake ground-zero for Anthropocene epoch
Canadian lake ground-zero for Anthropocene epoch / Photo: Peter POWER - AFP

Canadian lake ground-zero for Anthropocene epoch

Scientists on Tuesday designated a small body of water near Toronto, Canada as ground-zero for the Anthropocene, the proposed geological epoch defined by humanity's massive and destabilising impact on the planet.

Text size:

Layered sediment at the bottom of Lake Crawford -- laced with microplastics, fly-ash spread by burning oil and coal, and the detritus of nuclear bomb explosions -- is the single best repository of evidence that a new, and challenging, chapter in Earth's history has begun, members of the Anthropocene Working Group concluded.

"The data show a clear shift from the mid-20th century, taking Earth's system beyond the normal bounds of the Holocene", the epoch that began 11,700 years ago as the last ice age ended, working group member Andy Cundy, a professor at the University of Southampton, told AFP.

After years of deliberation, the Canadian lake was selected from among 12 candidate sites around the world -- including another lake, coral reefs, ice cores and an ocean bay in Japan -- as the Anthropocene's so-called golden spike.

"The sediment found at the bottom of the Crawford Lake provides an exquisite record of recent environmental change over the last millennia," said working group chair Simon Turner, a professor at University College London.

"It is this ability to precisely record and store this information as a geological archive that can be matched to historical global environmental changes."

Those changes are currently on dramatic display: last week was the hottest globally on record. Out-of-control forest fires have been ravaging Canada for months, while the US and China are coping with unprecedented heat, flooding and drought at the same time.

Humanity has burned so much fossil fuel that concentrations of planet-warming CO2, meanwhile, have increased by half.

Sea surface temperatures have hit new highs in recent weeks, and Antarctic sea ice last month was 17 percent below the previous record low for June.

- 'Great Acceleration' -

Last month scientists reported that so much water has been pumped from underground reservoirs that Earth's geographic North Pole has shifted -- by nearly five centimetres (two inches) per year.

According to the rules of the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICU), which in 2009 mandated a team of geologists to assess evidence for the Anthropocene, there must be a synchronous "primary marker" for a proposed boundary that is detectable in the geological record almost anywhere on the planet.

For the Anthropocene, plutonium cast off by hydrogen bomb tests provides that "global fingerprint", explained Cundy.

"The clearest marker for a single year -- which gives an abrupt and effectively instantaneous snapshot -- is plutonium, because there's so little of it naturally present."

That means 1952 -- when the United States first detonated a huge hydrogen bomb in the Marshall Islands as a test -- could become the Anthropocene's boundary year, he said.

Smaller atom bomb explosions before that left mostly regional imprints.

A sharp, hockey-stick increase across a dozen markers of humanity's growing impact -- including population, water use, greenhouse gas emissions, and forest loss -- bunched around the middle of the 20th century add up to what scientists call the Great Acceleration.

The "epoch of humans" first proposed in 2002 by chemistry Nobel Paul Crutzen is widely accepted within science as a reality, but faces daunting hurdles for formal validation by the gatekeepers of Earth's official geological timeline of eon, eras, periods and epochs, such as the Jurassic and the Cretaceous.

The Anthropocene's recommendations must be approved by super-majority vote of two separate committees before final validation by the International Unions of Geological Sciences (IUGS).

The heads of those bodies have thus far expressed sharp scepticism towards the Anthropocene, mostly on technical grounds.

"The vote in the working group is on a routine step at the lowest level," IUGS General Secretary Stanley Finney told AFP.

The working group has yet to submit its final recommendation to the International Commission on Stratigraphy, he noted.

"Only then can it be given peer review, and the evidence and arguments truly evaluated," Finney said.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)