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A mid-20th century stratigraphical Anthropocene is recognisable in the birth-area of the industrial revolution

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-06, 09:52 authored by Hannah Sellers, Mark WilliamsMark Williams, Juan BerrioJuan Berrio, Stefano De SabbataStefano De Sabbata, Neil L Rose, Simon D Turner, Handong Yang, Helen Bennion, Carl D Sayer, Neil Roberts, Amy Wrisdale, Marco A Aquino-Lopez
The formalisation of the Anthropocene as a subdivision of the Geological Time Scale has been under debate. Its stratigraphic boundary has been proposed as a precise Global boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) in the mid-20th century, but it is part of an episode of human-induced changes to the Earth System that have unfolded over millennia. Here we attempt to identify stratigraphical patterns of the Anthropocene from a previously well studied lake sedimentary archive from the English Midlands, located in one of the most heavily human-modified landscapes in the UK, and the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution. Our analysis is predicated on the sedimentary succession of Groby Pool, a small lake situated to the immediate northwest of Leicester. We have found that whilst proxy signals for biotic change are indicative of significant landscape and consequent ecological changes prior to the 20th century, the signal from radiogenic fallout and rapid increase in spheroidal carbonaceous particles indicative of fossil-fuel combustion yield a clear mid and later 20th century stratigraphical signature that corresponds with the Great Acceleration of the post-WWII period. We therefore demonstrate clear stratigraphical signatures in the oldest Industrial Revolution landscape on Earth that are consistent with a mid-20th century start point for the Anthropocene.

Funding

This work is funded through a University of Leicester College of Science and Engineering PhD studentship to Hannah Sellers.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Geography, Geology & Environment

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

The Anthropocene Review

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

2053-0196

eissn

2053-020X

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-02-06

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Stef De Sabbata

Deposit date

2025-01-24

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