Ecosocialist Notebook

Anthropocene: What’s in a name?

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Objections to the word ‘Anthropocene’ are misguided.

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In one of Douglas Adams’ Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy books, a committee of marketing managers, stranded on a prehistoric planet, is unable to invent the wheel. Responding to a critic, the committee chair says, “Ok, if you’re so clever, you tell us what color it should be!”

Hello-Anthropocene-2I’m reminded of that scene every time I read yet another article that responds to one of the most important scientific developments of our time, the Anthropocene, with the complaint that the scientists got the name wrong.

Never mind all that stuff about the Earth System changing in unprecedented and dangerous ways—change the name!

Alternative suggestions include obvious jokes like Misanthropocene and Anthrobscene, and more serious proposals like Sociocene, Technocene, Homogenocene, Econocene, and Capitalocene.

So far as I can tell, none of the proponents has submitted their suggestions to the Anthropocene Working Group, where their proposals could be formally considered. But since the suggestions reveal misunderstandings about the word itself, and about the conventions used in naming geological epochs, a short discussion is in order.

To begin, Anthropocene is a proposed name for a new geological epoch so the proposed name must follow geology’s naming conventions. The alternative proposals just add a new word in front of the suffix -cene, apparently believing that it means epoch or age, which it does not.

The suffix -cene comes from the Greek kainos meaning recent. It was introduced by the nineteenth century geologist Charles Lyell, who distinguished between various layers of rock by determining the proportions of extinct and non-extinct fossils each contained. Thus Miocene is from meiosfew of the fossils are recent. Pliocene is from pleiosmore of the fossils are recent. Pleistocene is from pleistosmost of the fossils are recent.

After the Pleistocene, Lyell added an interval that he just called Recent, but in 1885 the International Geological Congress changed that to Holocene, from the Greek holos, for strata in which the fossils are wholly or entirely recent.

So, contrary to what is often said in magazine articles, Anthropocene does not mean Human Age or Human Era. It combines kainos with anthropos, meaning human being, so, following Lyell’s approach, it means a time when geological strata are dominated by remains of recent human origin. Indeed, a key part of the ongoing Anthropocene debate among geologists concerns which such remains should be used to identify the new epoch. From the perspective of historical and physical geology, the name is appropriate.

In left-wing circles, the most often proposed alternative name for the new epoch is Capitalocene. Proponents argue that global change is being driven by a specific form of society, not humans in general, so the new epoch should be named after capitalism.

That would be a strong argument, if geological intervals were named after social systems, but they are not. If our current epoch is the Capitalocene, then surely the previous epoch should be renamed Feudalocene, preceded by the Slaveryocene, preceded by . . . what? The Hunter-Gatherer-ocene?

Take a deep breath, folks. The fact of the Anthropocene raises important political issues, but there is no hidden political agenda in the word Anthropocene. It does not imply a judgement about all humans or human nature.

The root word anthropos also appears in another common Earth Science term, anthropogenic. The expression “anthropogenic climate change” does not mean that all humans cause global warming; rather, it distinguishes changes that are caused by human action from those that would have occurred whether or not humans were involved. Similarly, Anthropocene doesn’t refer to all humans, but to an epoch of global change that would not have occurred in the absence of human activity.

The name is not perfect. As the often overheated discussions show, it is open to misinterpretation. Maybe if ecosocialists had been present when Paul Crutzen invented the word in 2000, a different name would have been adopted, but now Anthropocene is widely used by scientists and non-scientists alike. Insisting on a different word (for left-wing use only?) can only cause confusion, and direct attention away from far more important issues.

Let’s focus on the wheel, and not get hung up what color it is.


Ian

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2 Comments

  • After reading this I will be sure to use the proper geological term anthropocene on those very rare occasions when I am drawn into a conversation re layers of rock and the fossil record contained with them. However, I think you have inadvertently created the impression that those who are primarily concerned with the dramatic impact that capitalism and its ongoing disintegration has had on the living planet in a very short period can quite safely give geology, which typically deals with much longer periods of time, a pass.

    • Very droll. Anyone who draws such a sweeping conclusion from this short article should consider others that explain why that would be a serious mistake. To start, they (and you) could look at any of the five articles on the Anthropocene that are listed and linked immediately below this one.