Anthropocene? Humans Have Been Changing the Planet for Millennia.

So how do we mark the beginning of this human age?

a photo of the detonation of an atoll during operation ivy in 1952, showing a mushroom cloud above the sea
Nuclear bomb testing, such as this Operation Ivy test in 1952, left its mark in the geologic record.
(Image credit: Photo courtesy of National Nuclear Security Administration / Nevada Site Office)

Examples of how human societies are changing the planet abound — from building roads and houses, clearing forests for agriculture and digging train tunnels, to shrinking the ozone layer, driving species extinct, changing the climate and acidifying the oceans. Human impacts are everywhere. Our societies have changed Earth so much that it's impossible to reverse many of these effects.

Some researchers believe these changes are so big that they mark the beginning of a new "human age" of Earth history, the Anthropocene epoch. A committee of geologists has now proposed to mark the start of the Anthropocene in the mid-20th century, based on a striking indicator: the widely scattered radioactive dust from nuclear bomb tests in the early 1950s.

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Ben Marwick
Associate Professor of Archaeology, University of Washington

Ben Marwick is an associate professor of Archaeology. His research combines models from evolutionary ecology with analyses of archaeological evidence to investigate past human behavior.