great acceleration
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2022 ◽  
pp. 230-251
Author(s):  
Elhoucine Essefi

Previous works proposed different age models of sedimentation in Sebkha Lagoon of Boujmel leading to the setting of controversial interpretations of eustatic and climatic phases. The aim of this work is carrying out a geological correlation and an astrochronological calibration based on the Holocene cyclostratigraphy leading to the setting of an age model satisfying dates of climatic and eustatic phases identified in southern Tunisia, including the Anthropocene and the Great Acceleration. Along a 130 cm core, four major climatic phases were upward recorded.


2022 ◽  
pp. 252-266
Author(s):  
Elhoucine Essefi

This work aimed to study the cyclicity of the geochemical chemical parameters and the carbonate percentages along a 59 cm core from the sebkha of Mchiguig, Central Tunisia. In fact, from the bottom upwards, six climatic phases were recorded including the Warming Present (Great Acceleration), the Late Little Ice Age (Anthropocene), the Early Little Ice Age, the Medieval Climatic Anomaly, the Dark Age, and the Roman Warm Period. In fact, the spectral analysis of the studied parameters visualized many cycles. Those cycles are related to sun activity, oceanographic, and atmospheric factors. Solar activity generated 500 yr cycles; however, the oceanographic circulation generated other cycles of 1500 yr and 700-800 yr. The 1500 yr cycle may be the result of the solar activity and NAO-like circulation.


Episodes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin J. Head ◽  
Will Steffen ◽  
David Fagerlind ◽  
Colin N. Waters ◽  
Clement Poirier ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (40) ◽  
pp. e2022218118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael-Shawn Fletcher ◽  
Rebecca Hamilton ◽  
Wolfram Dressler ◽  
Lisa Palmer

The environmental crises currently gripping the Earth have been codified in a new proposed geological epoch: the Anthropocene. This epoch, according to the Anthropocene Working Group, began in the mid-20th century and reflects the “great acceleration” that began with industrialization in Europe [J. Zalasiewicz et al., Anthropocene 19, 55–60 (2017)]. Ironically, European ideals of protecting a pristine “wilderness,” free from the damaging role of humans, is still often heralded as the antidote to this human-induced crisis [J. E. M. Watson et al., Nature, 563, 27–30 (2018)]. Despite decades of critical engagement by Indigenous and non-Indigenous observers, large international nongovernmental organizations, philanthropists, global institutions, and nation-states continue to uphold the notion of pristine landscapes as wilderness in conservation ideals and practices. In doing so, dominant global conservation policy and public perceptions still fail to recognize that Indigenous and local peoples have long valued, used, and shaped “high-value” biodiverse landscapes. Moreover, the exclusion of people from many of these places under the guise of wilderness protection has degraded their ecological condition and is hastening the demise of a number of highly valued systems. Rather than denying Indigenous and local peoples’ agency, access rights, and knowledge in conserving their territories, we draw upon a series of case studies to argue that wilderness is an inappropriate and dehumanizing construct, and that Indigenous and community conservation areas must be legally recognized and supported to enable socially just, empowering, and sustainable conservation across scale.


2021 ◽  
pp. 205301962110460
Author(s):  
Cale AC Gushulak ◽  
Matthew Marshall ◽  
Brian F Cumming ◽  
Brendan Llew-Williams ◽  
R Timothy Patterson ◽  
...  

Diatom and chrysophyte assemblages from varved sediments of meromictic Crawford Lake, Ontario record major environmental changes resulting from spatially broadening anthropogenic environmental stressors related to the “Great Acceleration” in the mid-20th century. Biannual assessment of diatom and chrysophyte assemblages over the last ~200 years allowed for rate of change analysis between adjacent samples that increased substantially during the mid-20th century, concurrent with significant generalized additive model trends. Changes in diatom and chrysophyte assemblages were likely driven by multiple anthropogenic stressors including local forestry harvesting, agriculture, and milling activities, acidic deposition from regional industrial processes, and anthropogenic climate warming. Novel siliceous algal assemblages now exist in Crawford Lake, likely related to the complexities of the above mentioned local and regional stressors. The major assemblage changes at the proposed base of the Anthropocene Epoch detected in this study support the laminated sequence from Crawford Lake as a strong potential candidate for the Anthropocene GSSP.


Author(s):  
Joseph Amankwah-Amoah ◽  
Zaheer Khan ◽  
Geoffrey Wood ◽  
Gary Knight
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