The Human Epoch The Anthropocene Epoch as Earthly Modernity

Transcriber: Amanda Zhu
Reviewer: Rhonda Jacobs

On my way to work, I walk
through a typical new England woodland

and see enormous trees -

pine, oak, beech, hickory, maple -

they all grew back like weeds
on what had once been a farm,

a patchwork of grassy pastures
and cultivated fields.

My footpath wends its way
around a small pond

that once watered livestock,

past an old cellar hole,

and through old stone walls
that crisscross beneath the forest canopy.

During each of my pedestrian commutes,

I’m witness to the ruins
of an abandoned agricultural civilization

and the power of wild nature
to reclaim the land.

I live in a distinctly younger
epoch of modernity.

The word “modern” comes to us
from the Latin “modo,”

meaning “just now” as opposed
to some previous condition or mode.

To become modern
is to cross a boundary in time.

In this place between
an older culture of rural farmers

energized by manual labor,
draft animals, and fuel wood

and a younger culture of urbanizing,
industrial, more mobile people

energized mainly by fossil fuels.

When I get to my office
at the university, however,

to teach Earth System Science,

the spatial scale shifts
from that of New England farmsteads

to that of the entire globe.

And what does modernity look like
at that scale to a geoscientist?

Well, it looks like
a lot of familiar things to you:

rapid climate changes
fueled by greenhouse gas transfers,

resulting in the melting
of glaciers and permafrost,

the expansion of drylands,

and the intensification of storms.

It looks like ecosystem collapses,
resulting in a sixth mass extinction

involving both terrestrial
and marine settings.

And it looks like oceanic transformations,

resulting in sea level rise,

warming waters, diminished pack ice,

and a carbonized chemistry
with more acid and less oxygen.

This geophysical and geochemical modernity

also includes a human component.

An overwhelmingly dominant species,

ours, Homo sapiens,

spread into every habitat

and being in direct or indirect control
over nearly every other species.

It includes deliberate human makeovers
of land and sea from top to bottom,

often called “land use,”

accompanied by inadvertent, often chaotic
repercussions that we hadn’t planned on.

It includes never-seen-before
synthetic materials

like plastics,

novel chemicals

like the chlorofluorocarbons
that nearly destroyed the ozone layer,

and radionuclides like plutonium-239,

which dusted the entire planet

during the atomic bomb testing
I remember as a child.

The first of these three megatrends,
these modern megatrends -

climate change, ecosystem collapse
and oceanic changes -

are nothing new to planet Earth.

In fact, these are the criteria

that typically separate epochs
on the geological calendar.

It’s the last three
of these modern megatrends,

the human dominance, the human makeovers,
and the human inventions,

that are truly unique with respect
to the long-haul of Earth history,

which began a long time ago,

4.6 billion years ago.

But is there a single global thing
that holds these six megatrends together -

holistically and historically?

The answer is a clear “yes,”
in both space and time.

In space, that thing is the entire planet.

The close examination
inclusive modeling of which

leads to our understanding

of a spinning,

wobbling,

tilting,

orbiting,

sloshing,

living

spheroid

of gases liquids and solids.

So that’s the part about space.

In time, that thing is the newest epoch
of the geological time scale,

the almost-official Anthropocene epoch.

It’s an idea evoked 20 years ago,
in the year 2000,

by Paul Crutzen and Eugene Sturmer

to highlight the idea

that modern Earth is distinct
from all previous states.

It’s an epoch name for us human beings
not out of vanity or hubris

but for the astonishing power we’ve used
to literally change the face of the Earth.

It’s a word that
according to Google Analytics

has been accelerating in popularity,

even as the popularity
of the word “environmentalism”

is diminishing a little bit.

It’s a word that
through categorical thinking

will help create a paradigm shift

in the way we think about nature,
the wild, and the environment,

a word that I hope will help us return
to an ethical and sustainable future.

Consider three examples of news stories
from the modern United States

within the last few months:

raging forest fires in the American West,
especially in California;

the return of great white sharks
to New England,

especially Outer Cape Cod;

the drenching catastrophic floods
along the US Gulf Coast,

especially in New Orleans.

Now, all three of these things
are truly wild responses -

wildfires, wild carnivores, wild waters -

is something that we humans have done.

Ultimately, they can be traced back
to human behavior,

natural human behavior.

The wildfires come
from the baking droughts

we’ve intensified by global warming;

the wild shark populations

comes from the rising population of seals
that we’ve protected;

the wild waters

are happening on a landscape
that’s sinking beneath the sea

because we’ve starved the land

of the sediment it needs
to stay above sea level.

But what’s the root cause of all this?

To get there,

we have to work our way backwards
through a chain of causality,

and I’ll use the case
of wildfires as an example.

The fires are more intense

because the regional climate
is drier in summer

because the prevailing
hemispheric circulation has changed

because the average temperature
of the troposphere

is almost two degrees warmer

because humans have transferred
enormous amounts of carbon

from the terrestrial
component of our system

to the atmospheric component

because we enjoy the advantages

of cheap energy provided by fossil fuels
and of global deforestation

because our human psyches are governed
by instinctual animal behaviors

that emerged during human evolution.

Two of our behaviors
are particularly important.

The first is our natural drive
to have families

and provide for them as much as we can.

The second is our natural
cognitive intelligence,

which allows us to figure out
how things work

and invent new and better things,

such as tools, crops, materials,
medicines, homes, and sources of energy.

The motivation to improve our lives
combined with our flexible intelligence

gave rise to science,

which gave rise to engineering,

which gave rise to the power
to literally remake the planet.

The rest of this natural behavior

has been a human makeover
of the Earth’s surface,

part of which has been very deliberate,

like the building of cities,
the taming of rivers,

and the killing of carnivores;

and part of which has been
completely inadvertent,

like the fouling of our nests
and the raising of Earth’s temperature.

Regardless of intent,

human beings are now the dominant
geologic agent operating on the planet.

That’s a fact.

Moving mass at a greater rate
than the glaciers of the last ice age

and the rivers
of familiar geologic history,

global modernity
looks strikingly different

from the regional human history
of the previous Holocene epoch,

which began about 11,700 years ago.

Thus, we geoscientists have no choice
but to create an official new epoch,

and we’re nearly done with the process.

And the label “Anthropocene”

is simply the best one
we’ve come up with so far.

Various dates for the beginning
of this epoch of geologic modernity

have been suggested and hotly debated.

Some proponents favor the onset
of agriculture and early civilizations

about 10,000 years ago,

some favor the onset
of maritime colonialism

in the late 15th century,

some favor the rise
of the industrial revolution

in the late 18th century,

and most favor the global explosion
and great acceleration

of science, technology, human populations,

urbanization, energy use,
and land conversions

in the mid-20th century.

This last candidate for the beginning
of the Anthropocene epoch

is the best one

because it is ubiquitously
and clearly marked

by the radioactive dust from atomic bombs,

major excursion in chemical cycles,

and the deposition of sediment
with plastic trace fossils

the world over.

The Anthropocene
finds its ancient counterpart

in the 66 million-year-old
Paleocene epoch,

which was also strikingly different
from its predecessor

ruled by the dinosaurs.

In this earlier case,

the change came not from human technology

but from an asteroid impact

combined with colossal volcanism
about 67 million years ago

that initiated a cascade
of global disruptions

that gave mammals a chance
to start evolving into humans.

This earlier transition

is ubiquitously and clearly marked

by a concentration of cosmic dust,

geochemical excursions,

and the deposition of sediment
with different trace fossils.

So why does naming a new epoch matter?

Because as Aldous Huxley once wrote,

“Words are the channels
through which thought flows,”

some of our most influential words
are categorical labels;

for example, good versus bad,
old versus new, us versus them,

fruit versus vegetables,
or Democrats versus Republicans.

Thinking in the box
versus thinking out of the box

is also a categorical distinction -

though this practice can lead
to dangerous false dichotomies

and implicit biases -

on the whole that
it’s an essential tool for science,

the basis of all classifications.

In 1963,

I watched one of my heroes,
Rachel Carson, address the nation

on our family’s small black-and-white TV.

She was featuring her book
“Silent Spring.”

Seven years later, in 1970,

I participated in the first Earth Day
celebration as a college student.

Between these dates,

I witnessed the rise

of a new categorical meme
in popular culture:

environmentalism -

a new way of thinking
about chemical pollution,

endangered species,

and wilderness conservation,

all wrapped up into one bigger thing.

The single word “environmentalism”
channeled our thinking

to create a profound social change

in a world that had not yet begun
to concern itself with climate change.

Well, clearly, today we need
a new categorical meme

to channel our thinking

about an even larger
and more profound global concern:

the recognition that the fate
of the entire planetary surface

lies in human hands.

Is climate change that new meme?

It seems that way

given all the scientific, media,
and political attention,

but for me, and despite its popularity,

climate change is too small a concept

because climates
are by definition regional

and have always come
from the geological underground

via the tectonic rearrangements
of continental plates

and the chemical transfers

between Earth’s solid, liquid,
and gaseous reservoirs.

Climate change, ecosystem collapse,
oceanic transformations,

these are merely the big pieces
of a larger pie.

The holistic or mechanistic view
of that global pie is what I teach,

Earth system science.

The historic or narrative view of that pie
is Earth system history,

its latest chapter
being the Anthropocene epoch.

For me, the new meme we need
is the word “Anthropocene.”

We must be brave enough to admit

that we live in a new world
of our own making.

Only then can we stop blaming nature
and stop blaming ourselves

and return to sustainable ways
through human invention.

To help you understand this new world,

“the modern world,”

“modernity,”

“the Anthropocene,”

I ask you to imagine Earth’s surface
being a golf course of global proportions

with oceans being
oversized water features.

I don’t play golf,
but the analogy works for me.

Everything everywhere
is the result of human choices,

whether conversions of places
to better suit our needs

or the set-asides of places
for various reasons.

The intensity of transformation

falls on a continuum
on local golf courses,

from the holes in the sod
to the smooth greens

to the long fairways

to the uncut rough
and the forested out-of-bounds,

and this entire patchwork of places
lies below a human tweaked atmosphere.

On an actual rather than
golf-course-imagined Anthropocene Earth,

the intensity of transformation on land

falls on a continuum
from urban downtowns to suburbs

to ruburbia

to remote wildlands;

and on the sea,
it falls from fortified beaches

to dredged channels

to anoxic dead zones.

Both patchworks of places also lie
beneath a human-tweaked atmosphere.

Make no mistake -

geological modernity has arrived.

Its name is the Anthropocene.

After a day at work

spent thinking and teaching
about the global Earth system

at the university,

I walk back home through the woods.

During my return trip,

I find it easier to see
these abandoned pastures,

the livestock pond, the cellar hole,
and the stone walls

for what they are -

fossil evidence of the epoch
before modernity.

Perhaps in some distant future,

a post-human intelligence

will discover the ruins and residues
of our Anthropocene epoch

embedded in yet unnamed strata.

If and when that happens,

modernity will need a new name.

Thank you.

抄写员:Amanda Zhu
审稿人:Rhonda Jacobs

在上班的路上,我
穿过一片典型的新英格兰林地

,看到巨大的树木——

松树、橡树、山毛榉、山核桃、枫树——

它们都
像曾经是农场的杂草一样长回来了

,草场
和耕地拼凑而成。

我的小径
绕过一个

曾经给牲畜浇水的小池塘,

经过一个古老的地窖洞

,穿过
森林树冠下纵横交错的古老石墙。

在我的每一次行人通勤中,

我都见证
了废弃农业文明的废墟


野性开垦土地的力量。

我生活在一个明显更年轻
的现代时代。

“现代”这个词
来自拉丁语“modo”,

意思是“刚刚”,而不是
以前的一些条件或模式。

变得现代
就是跨越时间的界限。

在这个

由体力劳动、
牲畜和薪柴驱动的农村农民的古老文化与主要由化石燃料驱动

的城市化、
工业化、流动性

更强的年轻文化之间。 然而,

当我到
大学的办公室

教授地球系统科学时,

空间尺度从新英格兰农庄的空间尺度转移

到了整个地球的空间尺度。

对于地球科学家来说,现代性在那个尺度上是什么样子的?

嗯,这
对你来说看起来很熟悉:

温室气体转移

导致气候迅速变化,导致
冰川和永久冻土融化

,旱地扩大

,风暴加剧。

看起来生态系统正在崩溃,
导致第六次大规模灭绝,

涉及陆地
和海洋环境。

它看起来像是海洋变化,

导致海平面上升,

海水变暖,浮冰减少,

以及
酸更多、氧气更少的碳化化学物质。

这种地球物理和地球化学的现代性

还包括人的成分。

一个占绝对优势的物种,

我们的智人,

蔓延到每一个栖息地

,并且直接或间接地控制
着几乎所有其他物种。

它包括人类
从上到下对陆地和海洋的蓄意改造,

通常被称为“土地使用”,

伴随着我们未曾计划过的不经意的、经常是混乱的
影响。

它包括前所未见的
合成材料(

如塑料)、

新型化学物质(


几乎破坏臭氧层的氯氟烃),

以及钚 239 等放射性核素,我记得小时候

在原子弹试验期间曾将整个星球洒满灰尘

这三个大趋势中的第一个,
这些现代大趋势——

气候变化、生态系统崩溃
和海洋变化——

对地球来说并不是什么新鲜事。

事实上,这些

是通常
在地质日历上划分时代的标准。

这些现代大趋势中的最后三个,

即人类主导地位、人类改造
和人类发明,

在很久以前,46 亿年前开始的地球历史的长程中是真正独一无二的

但是,是否有一个单一的全球性
因素将这六个大趋势结合在一起——从

整体上和历史上?

答案
在空间和时间上都是明确的“是”。

在太空中,那个东西就是整个星球。

仔细检查其中的
包容性模型,

我们可以

理解气体液体和固体的旋转、

摆动、

倾斜、

轨道运行、

晃动、

球体。

这就是关于空间的部分。

在时间上,那
是地质时间尺度的最新

纪元,几乎是官方的人类世纪元。

这是 20 年前
,即 2000 年

,Paul Crutzen 和 Eugene Sturmer

提出的一个想法

,旨在强调现代地球
不同于以往所有国家的想法。

对于我们人类来说,这是一个划时代的名字,
不是出于虚荣或傲慢,

而是因为我们
用来改变地球面貌的惊人力量。

根据谷歌分析,这个词

的流行度一直在加速,

尽管
“环保主义”这个词的流行度

正在下降一点点。

这个词
通过分类

思维将

有助于改变我们对自然
、野生和环境的思考方式

,我希望这个词能帮助我们
回归道德和可持续发展的未来。

想想过去几个月现代美国新闻报道的三个例子

美国西部,
尤其是加利福尼亚州肆虐的森林大火;

大白鲨
返回新英格兰,

尤其是外科德角;

美国墨西哥湾沿岸的特大洪水,

特别是在新奥尔良。

现在,所有这三件事
都是真正的疯狂反应——

野火、野生食肉动物、野生水域——

是我们人类所做的事情。

归根结底,它们可以
追溯到人类行为,

人类的自然行为。

野火来自

我们因全球变暖而加剧的干旱;

野生鲨鱼

种群来自我们保护的海豹数量的增加

狂野的

水域发生在一个
正在下沉的海底景观,

因为我们已经饿死了


需要保持在海平面以上的沉积物的土地。

但这一切的根本原因是什么?

为了到达那里,

我们必须
通过一系列因果关系倒退

,我将以
野火的情况为例。

火灾更加激烈

是因为夏季区域气候
更干燥,

因为主要的
半球环流发生了变化,

因为对流层的平均温度几乎升高

两度,

因为人类已经将
大量的碳


我们系统的陆地部分

转移到大气中

因为我们享受

化石燃料提供的廉价能源
和全球森林砍伐的优势,

因为我们的人类心理受到

人类进化过程中出现的本能动物行为的支配。

我们的两个
行为特别重要。

首先是我们
拥有家庭

并尽可能多地供养他们的自然动力。

第二个是我们的自然
认知智能,

它使我们能够
弄清楚事物是如何运作的,

并发明出新的更好的东西,

例如工具、作物、材料、
药物、房屋和能源。

改善生活的动力
与灵活的智慧相结合,

催生了科学

,催生了工程学

,催生
了真正改造地球的力量。

这种自然行为的其余部分

是人类
对地球表面的改造,

其中一部分是经过深思熟虑的,

比如建造城市
、驯化河流

和杀死食肉动物;

其中一部分
完全是无意的,

比如我们的巢穴被污染
和地球温度升高。

无论意图如何,

人类现在都是
地球上主要的地质因素。

这是事实。

与上一个冰河时代的冰川


熟悉的地质历史的河流相比,

全球现代性

以更快的速度移动,与大约 11,700 年前开始的前一个全新世时代

的区域人类历史截然不同。

因此,我们地球科学家
别无选择,只能创建一个正式的新纪元

,我们几乎完成了这个过程。

而“人类世”这个标签

简直就是我们迄今为止想出的最好的一个

这个地质现代性时代开始的各种日期

已经被提出并引起了激烈的争论。

一些支持者赞成大约 10,000 年前
农业和早期文明的兴起

一些赞成 15 世纪后期开始
的海洋

殖民主义,

一些赞成

18 世纪后期工业革命的兴起

,大多数赞成全球爆炸
和伟大 20 世纪中叶

科学、技术、人口、

城市化、能源使用
和土地转换

的加速。 人类世时代

开始的最后一个候选者

是最好的一个,

因为它无处不在
且清晰地

被原子弹的放射性尘埃

、化学循环的重大偏移

以及

世界各地的塑料痕迹化石沉积物沉积所标记。

人类世

在距今 6600 万年的
古新世时期找到了它的古代对应物,

这也
与其

由恐龙统治的前身截然不同。

在这个较早的案例中

,变化不是来自人类技术,

而是来自大约 6700 万年前的小行星撞击

和巨大的火山活动

,引发了一连串
的全球破坏

,使哺乳动物有
机会开始进化为人类。

宇宙尘埃的集中、

地球化学的偏移

以及具有不同痕迹化石的沉积物的沉积,普遍而清晰地标志着这一早期转变

那么,为什么命名一个新纪元很重要呢?

因为正如奥尔德斯·赫胥黎曾经写过的那样,

“文字是
思想流动的渠道”

,我们最有影响力的一些词
是分类标签;

例如,好与坏,
旧与新,我们与他们,

水果与蔬菜,
或民主党与共和党。

在盒子里
思考和在盒子外面思考

也是一个分类的区别——

尽管这种做法会
导致危险的错误二分法

和隐含的偏见

——总的来说,
它是科学的重要工具,

是所有分类的基础。

1963 年,

我看到我的英雄之一
雷切尔·卡森(Rachel Carson)

在我们家的小型黑白电视上向全国发表讲话。

她展示了她的书
《寂静的春天》。

七年后的 1970 年,

我作为一名大学生参加了第一次地球日
庆祝活动。

在这些日期之间,

我目睹了流行文化

中一种新的分类模因的兴起

环保主义——

一种
思考化学污染、

濒危物种

和荒野保护的新方式,

所有这些都包含在一个更大的事物中。

“环保主义”这个词
引导了我们的思想

在一个尚未开始关注气候变化的世界中创造了一场深刻的社会
变革。

好吧,很明显,今天我们需要
一个新的分类模因

来引导我们

思考一个更大
、更深刻的全球问题

:认识到
整个行星表面的

命运掌握在人类手中。

气候变化是新的模因吗?

考虑到所有科学、媒体
和政治的关注,似乎是这样,

但对我来说,尽管它很受欢迎,但

气候变化是一个太小的概念,

因为
根据定义,气候是区域性的

,并且总是
来自地质地下,

通过地壳的构造重新
排列 大陆板块

地球固体、液体
和气体储层之间的化学转移。

气候变化、生态系统崩溃、
海洋变化,

这些只是
更大蛋糕中的大块。

我教的是地球系统科学,即全球馅饼的整体或机械观点

该馅饼的历史或叙事观点
是地球系统历史,

其最新章节
是人类世时代。

对我来说,我们需要的新模因
是“人类世”这个词。

我们必须勇敢地

承认我们生活在一个
自己创造的新世界中。

只有这样,我们才能停止责备自然
,停止责备自己,


通过人类的发明回归可持续的方式。

为了帮助你理解这个新世界,

“现代世界”、

“现代性”、

“人类世”,

我请你想象地球表面
是一个全球比例的高尔夫球场,

海洋是
超大的水景。

我不打高尔夫球,
但这个类比对我有用。

任何地方的一切
都是人类选择的结果,

无论是
为了更好地满足我们的需要而改建的地方,

还是
出于各种原因而预留的地方。

转变的强度在当地

高尔夫球场上是连续的

从草皮上的洞
到光滑的果岭,

再到长长的球道,

再到未切割的长草
和森林的界外

,这整个拼凑而成的地方都
位于人类下方 调整气氛。

在一个真实的而非
高尔夫球场想象的人类

世地球上,陆地上的转变强度

呈连续统一体,
从市区到郊区

,再到 ruburbia

到偏远的荒地;

在海上,
它从坚固的海滩坠落

到疏浚的渠道,

再到缺氧的死区。

这两个地方的拼凑也位于
人类调整的气氛之下。

别搞错了——

地质现代性已经到来。

它的名字叫人类世。

在大学里花了一天

时间思考和
教授全球地球

系统后,

我穿过树林走回家。

在回程中,

我发现
这些废弃的牧场

、牲畜池塘、地窖

石墙更容易看到它们的本来面目——现代性之前

时代的化石证据

或许在遥远的未来

,后人类智能

会发现

嵌入尚未命名的地层中的人类世时代的废墟和残余物。

如果发生这种情况,

现代性将需要一个新名称。

谢谢你。