Authors
Antony G Brown, Stephen Tooth, Joanna E Bullard, David SG Thomas, Richard C Chiverrell, Andrew J Plater, Julian Murton, Varyl R Thorndycraft, Paolo Tarolli, James Rose, John Wainwright, Peter Downs, Rolf Aalto
Publication date
2017/1/1
Journal
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms
Volume
42
Issue
1
Pages
71–90
Description
The Anthropocene is proposed as a new interval of geological time in which human influence on Earth and its geological record dominates over natural processes. A major challenge in demarcating the Anthropocene is that the balance between human‐influenced and natural processes varies over spatial and temporal scales owing to the inherent variability of both human activities (as associated with culture and modes of development) and natural drivers (e.g. tectonic activity and sea level variation). Against this backdrop, we consider how geomorphology might contribute towards the Anthropocene debate by focusing on human impact on aeolian, fluvial, cryospheric and coastal process domains, and how evidence of this impact is preserved in landforms and sedimentary records. We also consider the evidence for an explicitly anthropogenic geomorphology that includes artificial slopes and other human‐created …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AG Brown, S Tooth, JE Bullard, DSG Thomas… - Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 2017