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Humans began dominating Earth in year 1610
London, March 12
With an unusual drop in
atmospheric carbon dioxide and the irreversible exchange of species
between the New and Old Worlds, the human-dominated geological epoch
known as the Anthropocene probably began around in 1610, a research
shows.
"The Anthropocene probably began when species jumped
continents, starting when the Old World met the New. We humans are now a
geological power in our own right - as Earth -changing as a meteorite
strike," explained lead author Simon Lewis from the University College
London (UCL).
The study authors systematically compared the major environmental impacts of human activity over the past 50,000 years.
Just
two dates met the criteria: 1610 when the collision of the New and Old
Worlds a century earlier was first felt globally, and 1964, associated
with the fallout from nuclear weapons tests.
The researchers conclude that 1610 is the stronger candidate.
"The
1492 arrival of Europeans in the Americas, and subsequent global trade,
moved species to new continents and oceans, resulting in a global
re-ordering of life on Earth. This rapid cross-ocean exchange of species
is without precedent in Earth's history," researchers from the
University College London and University of Leeds explained.
The
first fossil pollen of maize, a Latin American species, appears in
marine sediment in Europe in 1600, becoming common over subsequent
centuries.
This irreversible exchange of species satisfies the first criteria for dating an epoch - long-term changes to Earth.
The
researchers also found a pronounced dip in atmospheric carbon dioxide
centred on the year 1610 and captured in Antarctic ice-core records.
The drop occurred as a direct result of the arrival of Europeans in the Americas.
Till
date, the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in the late 18th
century has most commonly been suggested as the start of the
Anthropocene.
However, the researchers did not find this a right
candidate because most effects were local, while the global exponential
rise in carbon dioxide was too smooth an increase to form a precisely
dated marker.
"A more wide-spread recognition that human actions
are driving far-reaching changes to the life-supporting infrastructure
of Earth will have implications for our philosophical, social, economic
and political views of our environment," added study co-author professor
Mark Maslin from the UCL.
The paper appeared in the journal Nature.












