The Green Planet Monitor
Green Planet Monitor Podcast
Planet Earth. We humans tend to think of it as ours, to do with as we please.
Over the past two centuries, that’s exactly what humans have done. Humanity’s transformation of Earth’s atmosphere, land surface and oceans has a name – the Anthropocene. Dutch chemist Paul Crützen and American biologist Eugene Stoermer coined the term a quarter century ago.
Last week, at a geology conference in Lille, France, a scientific panel presented their formal definition of the Anthropocene — when it began, how it should be ranked in the official geological time scale and where human impacts are best observed in the rock record.
The panel’s proposed location — a little lake in southern Ontario.
To be more precise, the Anthropocene Working Group’s proposed prototype for the base of a new Earth stage and epoch is a 2-centimeter segment of a long core pulled from the bottom sediments of Crawford Lake, in Milton, Ontario, an hour’s drive west of Toronto.
Crawford Lake sediments, as it happens, have been studied for years. Back in the 1970’s, palynologists pinpointed corn pollen there, dating to the 14th and 15th centuries; the legacy of indigenous people who lived along the lake’s shores, cultivating their Three Sisters — corn, beans and squash.
Above those corn pollen grains, in layers laid down in the mid-20th century, Anthropocene researchers have pinpointed the fingerprints of less benign human activity — spheroidal carbonaceous particles from high-temperature coal burning, and radioactive plutonium from thermonuclear weapons tests that peaked in the mid-1950s.
That distinct layer is now being put forward as the Global Stratotype Section and Point, or GSSP, marking the base of the Crawfordian stage, and a brand new Epoch – the Anthropocene — thereby terminating the one we’ve been in for the past 12,000 years, the Holocene.
The more popular name for a GSSP – a Golden Spike.
This past Tuesday, at the 4th International Congress of the International Commission on Stratigraphy, in Lille, two members of the Anthropocene Working Group (AWG) presented their results.
The definition the AWG is now proposing – centering on the Crawford Lake GSSP — will need to be ratified by the body that commissioned it, the Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy. If that happens, the proposal will move up to the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS), then to the supreme arbiter of all matters geological, the International Union of Geological Sciences.
At each stage, supermajority approval will be required. The proposal’s future is anything but certain.
Listen to the announcement in this podcast edition. Click on the button on top, or go here.
Colin Waters is the first you’ll hear. He’s the chair of the AWG, set up by a subcommission of the ICS back in 2009. Francine McCarthy follows. McCarthy is a geologist at Brock University, and the scientific director of Team Crawford. This is technical stuff. Listen closely.
Last week’s proposed definition of the Anthropocene may come as a surprise to some. Aren’t we already in the Anthropocene, ordinary people ask?
Not according to those who govern Earth’s official time scale — the International Chronostratigraphic Time Chart.
Judging from the public comments of ranking geologists, the AWG’s proposed formal definition, announced last week in Lille, France, may well wither on the geo-bureaucratic vine.
Further indication of which way the wind blows was on display at the International Commission of Stratigraphy’s conference in Lille, last week. After having suggested that the AWG’s proposed definition of the Anthropocene and its candidate Golden Spike could be publicly announced at the conference, organizers reversed themselves. Crawford Lake findings could be presented to stratigraphers by AWG chair Colin Waters and Crawford Lake researcher Francine McCarthy, as planned, but media would not be welcome.
A French camera crew spoke with Waters, McCarthy and Brock University geologist Martin Head outside the conference hall (see photo above). Their public announcement took place that evening, at a Lille hotel, in partnership with the Berlin-based Haus der Kulturen der Welt and the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, who helped fund the AWG’s work.
If the AWG’s Anthropocene proposal does get end up getting deep-sixed by higher geological authorities, a whole lot of hardworking geologists will be crestfallen. The AWG’s 38 members (23 voting; 15 advisory) have been labouring on their proposal for over a decade.
Then there are the geologists, geochemists, palynologists and other specialists associated with the dozen candidate sites originally in the running for the Anthropocene’s Golden Spike. Hundreds of them. Among these, no one has worked harder than the scientific director of the winning candidate, Crawford Lake — Francine McCarthy.
I spoke with McCarthy the morning after the July 11 Big Announcement in Lille. Listen to our conversation in today’s podcast. Click on the button on top, or go here.
Francine McCarthy pays homage to the First Nations people who walked lightly on Crawford Lake shores, leaving the most benign of signature in the lake’s sediments – corn pollen.
Today, the lake and its surroundings are owned and operated by Halton Region Conservation Authority, established under the Conservation Authorities Act of the Province of Ontario.
But Crawford Lake sits on unceded lands of the Wyandot, Wendat, Attawandaron, Tianantate and Wenro peoples. First Nations leaders granted permission for the lake’s bottom sediments to be cored, on various occasions. Now they want her to remain in peace, and recover.
Catherine Tammaro is a seated Spotted Turtle Clan Faith Keeper, and an artist living in Toronto. Her ancestral roots at Crawford Lake run deep. Tammaro’s installations have appeared at exhibitions around the world. Among these, at the House of World Culture, in Berlin, that helped fund the activities of the Anthropocene Working Group, and at Crawford Lake itself.
I spoke with Catherine Tammaro at her art studio in Cabbagetown, Toronto. Listen to our conversation in today’s podcast, or go here.
Instrumental guitar in GPM podcasts are performed by Dan Weisenberger.