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Anthropocene: Difference between revisions
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<small>Against such a highly anthropocene background, local effects of a faltering ocean current can be particularly harsh. Take the western Sahel. Water scarcity and declining agricultural yields due to increasing heat stress are becoming acute anyway, while in the small part of Africa from Mauritania to Nigeria more than a billion people will be added in the next eighty years. [https://www.vn.nl/warmteregelaar-aarde-zwakt-af/ De warmteregelaar van de aarde zwakt af. En dat kan ons idee van de klimaatverandering op z’n kop zetten] </small> | <small>Against such a highly anthropocene background, local effects of a faltering ocean current can be particularly harsh. Take the western Sahel. Water scarcity and declining agricultural yields due to increasing heat stress are becoming acute anyway, while in the small part of Africa from Mauritania to Nigeria more than a billion people will be added in the next eighty years. [https://www.vn.nl/warmteregelaar-aarde-zwakt-af/ De warmteregelaar van de aarde zwakt af. En dat kan ons idee van de klimaatverandering op z’n kop zetten] </small> | ||
[[ | [[Eugene F.Stoermer|Stoermer]] originally coined and used the term Anthropocene from the early 1980s to refer to the impact and evidence for the effects of human activity on the planet earth. The word was not used in general culture until it was popularized in 2000 by the Nobel prize winner Dr Paul J Crutzen <ref>Jan Zalasiewicz, Mark Williams, Will Steffen & Paul Crutzen. The New World of the Anthropocene [https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/es903118j Environ. Sci. Technol. 2010, 44, 2228–2231]</ref> | ||
The name Anthropocene is a combination of anthropo- from anthropos (Ancient Greek: ἄνθρωπος) meaning "human" and -cene from kainos (Ancient Greek: καινός) meaning "new" or "recent." But neither ICS nor IUGS recognized as geological time | The name Anthropocene is a combination of anthropo- from anthropos (Ancient Greek: ἄνθρωπος) meaning "human" and -cene from kainos (Ancient Greek: καινός) meaning "new" or "recent." But neither ICS nor IUGS recognized as geological time | ||
{{Wikidata|Q26841}} | {{Wikidata|Q26841}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 22:17, 20 March 2023
Against such a highly anthropocene background, local effects of a faltering ocean current can be particularly harsh. Take the western Sahel. Water scarcity and declining agricultural yields due to increasing heat stress are becoming acute anyway, while in the small part of Africa from Mauritania to Nigeria more than a billion people will be added in the next eighty years. De warmteregelaar van de aarde zwakt af. En dat kan ons idee van de klimaatverandering op z’n kop zetten
Stoermer originally coined and used the term Anthropocene from the early 1980s to refer to the impact and evidence for the effects of human activity on the planet earth. The word was not used in general culture until it was popularized in 2000 by the Nobel prize winner Dr Paul J Crutzen [1] The name Anthropocene is a combination of anthropo- from anthropos (Ancient Greek: ἄνθρωπος) meaning "human" and -cene from kainos (Ancient Greek: καινός) meaning "new" or "recent." But neither ICS nor IUGS recognized as geological time
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