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Glossary›Anthropocene

Glossary

Anthropocene

The proposed geological epoch marking the period when human activity became the dominant influence on Earth's climate, geology, and ecosystems.

What is Anthropocene?

The Anthropocene is a proposed geological epoch characterized by humanity’s measurable and dominant impact on Earth’s geology, atmosphere, and biosphere. Unlike previous epochs defined by natural forces—ice ages, meteor impacts, tectonic shifts—the Anthropocene marks the first time a single species has altered planetary systems at a scale visible in the geological record. Evidence includes radionuclides from nuclear testing, plastics in sediment layers, altered nitrogen and phosphorus cycles, mass extinction rates, and atmospheric CO₂ concentrations unprecedented in 800,000 years. While not yet formally ratified by the International Commission on Stratigraphy, the term has gained widespread scientific and cultural currency as a framework for understanding humanity’s relationship with the living Earth.

Origins & Lineage

The term “Anthropocene” was popularized in 2000 by atmospheric chemist Paul Crutzen and ecologist Eugene Stoermer in the newsletter of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme. Crutzen, who won the Nobel Prize for his work on ozone depletion, argued that the Holocene epoch had ended and that human influence warranted recognition as a new geological time unit. The concept built on earlier observations: in 1873, Italian geologist Antonio Stoppani proposed the “Anthropozoic era,” and in the 1920s, Russian scientist Vladimir Vernadsky described the “noosphere”—a sphere of human thought reshaping the planet.

Debate centers on when the Anthropocene began. Proposed start dates include the advent of agriculture (10,000–8,000 years ago), the Columbian Exchange of 1492, the Industrial Revolution circa 1800, or the “Great Acceleration” following World War II in the mid-20th century. In 2016, the Anthropocene Working Group proposed July 16, 1945—the date of the first atomic bomb test—as the start, citing the global distribution of radioactive isotopes as a clear stratigraphic marker. As of 2024, the proposal remains under review by geological authorities.

How It’s Practiced

The Anthropocene is not a practice but a conceptual lens through which humans examine their ecological and geological agency. It manifests in multiple domains: scientists use it to study Earth system changes; environmental humanists explore its ethical, cultural, and spiritual implications; artists create work confronting humanity’s planetary imprint; and contemplative communities integrate it into teachings on interconnection, impermanence, and collective responsibility.

In conscious and spiritual contexts, the Anthropocene serves as a call to re-examine anthropocentrism—the belief that humans are separate from or superior to nature. Practices emerging from this awareness include deep ecology meditations, grief rituals for ecological loss (sometimes called “climate grief circles”), land-based spiritual work acknowledging bioregional relationships, and eco-dharma teachings in Buddhist contexts that frame environmental collapse as a collective karma requiring engaged response.

Anthropocene Today

Contemporary engagement with the Anthropocene spans academic, artistic, and spiritual spheres. Universities offer courses in Anthropocene studies; museums mount exhibitions visualizing human impact; retreat centers host programs on eco-spirituality and what Buddhist teacher Joanna Macy calls “The Great Turning.” Podcasts, documentaries, and books—from Elizabeth Kolbert’s The Sixth Extinction to Timothy Morton’s philosophy of “hyperobjects”—bring the concept to general audiences.

Spiritual teachers increasingly address the Anthropocene directly. The term appears in Christian eco-theology (Pope Francis’s 2015 encyclical Laudato si’), Jewish environmental ethics, Indigenous sovereignty movements reclaiming stewardship models, and secular mindfulness programs emphasizing ecological awareness. Many seekers encounter the concept through climate activism, where it informs narratives of accountability, intergenerational justice, and the possibility—or impossibility—of planetary repair.

Common Misconceptions

The Anthropocene is not a celebration of human dominance or technological prowess. While some interpret it as evidence of human exceptionalism, most scientific and spiritual discourse treats it as a warning.

It is not universally accepted. Geologists debate whether human impact meets the criteria for a formal epoch designation. Critics also note that “Anthropocene” obscures inequality: industrialized nations and wealthy elites bear disproportionate responsibility, leading some scholars to prefer terms like “Capitalocene” or “Plantationocene.”

The Anthropocene does not erase natural agency. Ecosystems, weather patterns, and non-human life continue to exert force; the term describes human influence becoming geologically significant, not absolute.

Finally, it is not purely pessimistic. While it confronts ecological damage, many frame the Anthropocene as an inflection point—a chance to cultivate what ethnobotanist Wade Davis calls “a new story” of reciprocity with the more-than-human world.

How to Begin

Begin with accessible, rigorous sources. Read The Human Planet by Simon L. Lewis and Mark A. Maslin for scientific overview, or Dipesh Chakrabarty’s essay “The Climate of History” for philosophical context. Listen to the Emergence Magazine podcast for contemplative perspectives.

For embodied practice, explore Joanna Macy’s “Work That Reconnects” workshops, which use group process to metabolize eco-grief and cultivate active hope. Join a local climate grief circle or bioregional study group. Consider land-based practices: learn the names of species in your watershed, participate in restoration projects, or study Indigenous land relationships in your area.

Approach the Anthropocene not as abstract theory but as lived reality—a call to examine consumption, lineage, and legacy with unflinching honesty and, where possible, to act.

Related terms

deep ecologyeco dharmainterbeingsacred activismbioregionalismclimate grief
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