Say what?
This is dead interesting. With a debate point at the end.
These are the ages we've had (the age of Aquarius doesn't seem to be officially amongst them):
https://stratigraphy.org/ICSchart/ChronostratChart2023-06.pdf
Things, like the Jurassic Age, etc.
So, how are these ages decided? Well, there's an International Commission on Stratigraphy (that probably means something):
https://stratigraphy.org/gssps/
And they debate on all sorts of Stratigraphic subjects. I presume.
Anyhoo... There's a lake in Canada called Crawford lake. Which means that I presume it to be a lake, but it could just be the name of a town... I dunno...
From the Beeb:
Crawford Lake, a small body of water in Ontario, Canada, is being put forward as the location that best records humanity's impacts on Earth.
So it is water. But, yet, presumably a lake.
And to continue:
Its sediments have captured fallout from intense fossil fuel burning, and even the plutonium from bomb tests.
The muds would be symbolic of the onset of a proposed Anthropocene Epoch.
Researchers want to acknowledge their significance by making them a "golden spike", or more properly a Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point.
Other great transitions in geological time are associated with a GSSP. Often, it's literally a brass nail hammered into some cliff face deemed to be of major scientific importance.
But for Crawford, it would be a brass plaque next to a frozen section of the sediments, kept in a museum in the Canadian capital, Ottawa.
Let me quote Dr. Turner on this:
"Crawford is just brilliant for this. A core from its bottom muds looks like a massive dirty lollipop, but it contains these beautiful, annually laminated sediments.
Since the last ice age (about 11.000 years ago) we've been living in the Holocene age (god only knows what those hippies were singing about).
Here's another link, which touches on this subject, but is actually about something else, even more interesting:
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20230808-atomic-bomb-spike-carbon-radioactive-body-anthropocene
How cool is that? Or radioactive.
Anyways... so, this Crawfod Anthropocene age is being submitted to international committee on these things to be classified as:
Period: Quaternary
Epoch: Anthropocene
Age: Crawfordian
Currently we're in the Epoch Holocene and the Age Meghalayan (so nothing to do with Aquarius anyways).
And so, after you've read all that... and I bet you did, because it's absolutely fascinating, is a new age, based on humanity's footprint on the planet, a good basis for a new epoch and age?
@shavixmir saidπ you want so bad to be relevant
Say what?
This is dead interesting. With a debate point at the end.
These are the ages we've had (the age of Aquarius doesn't seem to be officially amongst them):
https://stratigraphy.org/ICSchart/ChronostratChart2023-06.pdf
Things, like the Jurassic Age, etc.
So, how are these ages decided? Well, there's an International Commission on Stratigraphy (that pr ...[text shortened]... ng, is a new age, based on humanity's footprint on the planet, a good basis for a new epoch and age?
@mott-the-hoople saidToo complicated for you, eh?
π you want so bad to be relevant
Stick to the paranoid extremist politics then. That's dumbed down for ya.
@shavixmir saidshag doody for brains
Say what?
This is dead interesting. With a debate point at the end.
These are the ages we've had (the age of Aquarius doesn't seem to be officially amongst them):
https://stratigraphy.org/ICSchart/ChronostratChart2023-06.pdf
Things, like the Jurassic Age, etc.
So, how are these ages decided? Well, there's an International Commission on Stratigraphy (that pr ...[text shortened]... ng, is a new age, based on humanity's footprint on the planet, a good basis for a new epoch and age?
@shavixmir saidAww, that's what Mott used to call his mom's cooch.
looks like a massive dirty lollipop
And so, after you've read all that... and I bet you did, because it's absolutely fascinating, is a new age, based on humanity's footprint on the planet, a good basis for a new epoch and age?
Honestly, I'm not smart enough to discuss this. It is interesting though. Maybe Sonhouse can chime in.
@kewpie saidI suggest sticking to the OP.
The OP was brilliant, so I read on. What a disappointment. Why can't an online debates forum have discussions about real topics? Is it just because the species dumbus americanus just can't shut up?
Because it is an incredible topic.
Something I had heard absolutely nothing at all about until... well... until today.
Obviously I'd heard of Jurassic, something to do with T-rex's and frogs and Aquarius (hippies), but how, what and why? Never in my life.
So, I suggest the OP stands. and we discard the little tift between Wayoma and myself.
@shavixmir
The delimiting point when the anthropocene started is somewhat arbitrary. Certainly the evidence in the mud at the bottom of Lake Crawford is evidence of massive interference in nature by mankind, but I would contend that that started a long time ago. Roughly, when mankind stopped being primarily a hunter-gather and became a settled farmer. This markedly changed the soil chemistry (as radioactivity also does), and began the long process of domestication of various animals, foul, cattle, sheep, swine, and goats. This changed both the flora and fauna, since the excrement of domesticated animals changes the soil, and the traces of it will remain in the soil long after we have become extinct. Hunter-gatherers leave very little trace of themselves, other than bones, and change the environment very little, compared to settled farmers.
Certainly, the advent of the nuclear or atomic age is worth mentioning as a potentially cataclysmic delimiter, geologically, but it wasn't the first. That's my point.
Good topic, shav.
@shavixmir saidwhat tifty, i thought that was really a great joke where you said you presume crawford lake means a lake, self deprecating humor, wow, funny, kinda jokey and funny, haha. annyhoo, no, no it isn't, no. yes, yes it is, a body of water, you really rode it all the way, wrung it all the way out. You rode the age of aquarius pretty hard too, haha., maximum joke mileage. I for one gave you a thumbs up
I suggest sticking to the OP.
Because it is an incredible topic.
Something I had heard absolutely nothing at all about until... well... until today.
Obviously I'd heard of Jurassic, something to do with T-rex's and frogs and Aquarius (hippies), but how, what and why? Never in my life.
So, I suggest the OP stands. and we discard the little tift between Wayoma and myself.
@vivify saidwhy so vulgar? seems pretty common with liberals π³ sad
Aww, that's what Mott used to call his mom's cooch.
And so, after you've read all that... and I bet you did, because it's absolutely fascinating, is a new age, based on humanity's footprint on the planet, a good basis for a new epoch and age?
Honestly, I'm not smart enough to discuss this. It is interesting though. Maybe Sonhouse can chime in.
@mott-the-hoople saidshag doody calls me a cancerous ho and makes one of his usual koala jokes then next thing he's telling everyone to stick to the OP like he's the thread police.
why so vulgar? seems pretty common with liberals π³ sad
He encourages vulgarity, but when someone else does it he get's bytchey.
@wajoma saidI suggest a separate thread for us.
shag doody calls me a cancerous ho and makes one of his usual koala jokes then next thing he's telling everyone to stick to the OP like he's the thread police.
He encourages vulgarity, but when someone else does it he get's bytchey.
That way we can keep the rest of the threads clean and on topic.
@shavixmir saiddid you suck that suggestion out of your dogs bleeding ass?
I suggest a separate thread for us.
That way we can keep the rest of the threads clean and on topic.
@moonbus saidDo you know, from the other ages, what some of the defining factors were, that they created a new age?
@shavixmir
The delimiting point when the anthropocene started is somewhat arbitrary. Certainly the evidence in the mud at the bottom of Lake Crawford is evidence of massive interference in nature by mankind, but I would contend that that started a long time ago. Roughly, when mankind stopped being primarily a hunter-gather and became a settled farmer. This markedly changed ...[text shortened]... cataclysmic delimiter, geologically, but it wasn't the first. That's my point.
Good topic, shav.
Things like no more dinosaurs? The bronze age?