Human  history on a geological scale is miniscule, tiny – a blip.  The  geological time scale goes back four and a half billion years from the  fiery birth of the earth to the present day.  Now, however, some  scientists are calling for an end to the current epoch – the Holocene.   They are suggesting we have moved in to a new epoch altogether – the  Anthropocene.  This translates literally to the 
Human Epoch.  So  why the need for change?
The term Anthropocene was  only coined ten years ago by 
Paul Crutzen.   The Nobel Prize winning atmospheric chemist, best known for his  groundbreaking work on ozone depletion coined the term to satisfy his  need to describe the age in which we are now living.  It is different  from the Holocene, he argues (image of the Early Holocene left). The  Anthropocene is the representation of the effect a single species has  had on the planet.  That species is, of course, us.
His case is that by our actions we are going to leave a permanent  signature in our earthly geology. These actions will be traceable back  to us even millions of years in the future when scientists (
possibly  not us by that time) will be able to see the point at which we  changed the earth’s oceans and biosphere irreversibly.
The geological time scale  is vastly important in terms of understanding what has happened to the  earth over hundreds of millions of years.  As rock is penetrated it  delivers revelations about what life was like ten thousand, ten million  or at its very beginnings billions of years ago.
The changes to the time scale have to this point always been natural.   The great big meteoric rock that killed off the dinosaurs for example  was one point at which the time scale changed.
So indeed was the Ice Age  which resulted due to a shift in the earth’s orbit.   There are many  different epochs and their records are in the rocks.  Imagine them like  pages in a book, each one making a chapter telling its own part of the  planet’s lengthy and complex history.
Not just one book, though – think volumes.  It’s like one of those huge  episodic Dickens novels but about stone instead.
Each epoch is only a small part of the scale.  They are subdivisions of a  Period – the one in which we find ourselves currently is the Quaternary  Period.  Each Period is a subdivision of an Era.
We are in the Cenozoic Era.  
Still with us?We are currently in the  Holocene epoch, which has only been around since the last Ice Age twelve  thousand years and is in terms of geological eras still pretty wet  behind the ears itself.  Even its name translated from the Greek means 
entirely  new.  So, why bother with the change at all – couldn’t we,  shouldn’t we simply be included in the Holocene?
Well, that sets the scene for what will no doubt become the hottest of  heated debates in geological circles.  Like Knights Templar of stones  and rocks, there is a body which guards the integrity of the geological  time scale.  They go under the marvellous title of the International  Commission on Stratigraphy (image in the head of a certain Time Lord  flashing his telepathic paper and saying 
I’m with the ICS –  cool).
In May they will meet up to discuss the findings of their Anthropocene  Working Group (no doubt referred to as the AWG).
The battleground is set –  with it seems just under half of the ICS agreeing with the need to  change and slightly over half of them in favour of giving the idea the  old heave ho.  Most foresee, however, that we are living in an age which  may well see a massive shift in the contents of the fossil record.  However, it was only a few years ago that scientists were predicting a  new Ice Age and look what came of that.
It is possible of course (and many geologists agree) that it is way too  early to tell if this will truly be the case as – to put it simply – we  just haven’t been around long enough to leave anything but a thin sliver  on the fossil record.
Although they use the term informally they see no need to, ahem, carve  it in stone.
Buy Nikon CamerasImage CreditsAmmonite -  Flickr User Kevin Zim Fossil  Frog Flickr User KevinzimEarly  HoloceneMeteor  Collision Ice  Age Housekuriositas  
 
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