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ARE WE LIVING IN THE ANTHROPOCENE?

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

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March 2020

A name can tell you a lot about a person. Take your last name, for example. Does it come from a certain language, a place where your ancestors were born, a traditional family occupation? How about your first name? What does it say about you? If you could change it, would you? What would you change it to, and why?

ARE WE LIVING IN THE ANTHROPOCENE?

Geologic time has names, too, big names, kind of hard to remember ones—names for eons, eras, periods, and epochs. According to the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) the professional organization that oversees any changes to the Geologic Time Scale (more formally known as the International Chronostratigraphic Chart), we are in the Phanerozoic Eon, the Cenozoic Era, the Quaternary Period, and the Holocene Epoch.

But when it comes to the Holocene, the geologic epoch that began 11,700 years ago, not everyone agrees with the name. Many geologists and scholars think it’s time for a change.

Another Idea

The proposed name for our current geologic epoch is the Anthropocene. This term suggests that we humans should name this slice of time after ourselves. Although the name has only recently gained traction, the word itself is not new. Paul Crutzen, a Nobel Prize–winning Dutch atmospheric chemist, first used the term in 2000. Crutzen later discovered that ecologist Eugene Stoermer had previously coined “Anthropocene.” But a 2002 paper by Crutzen in the prestigious scientific journal Nature brought attention to the concept.

Why the Proposed Change?

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Muse Science Magazine for Kids

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Muse Science Magazine for Kids

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WOMEN AND FIREFIGHTING: A GOOD FIT

Jessica Gardetto is a firefighter. Her father was, too. “I grew up with my dad coming home smelling like wildfire and covered in soot,” she says.

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What is happening on your fingertips when they get all wrinkly in a hot tub?

—Felix G., age 10, Montana

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WHEN the SMOKE CLEARS

THE LINGERING EFFECTS OF THE RECENT PACIFIC PALISADES AND ALTADENA EATON FIRES

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PICKING TEAMS

Keep it fair with a strategy that relies on geometry.

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SHAN CAMMACK

WILDLIFE BIOLOGIST AND FIRE SAFETY OFFICER

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Scientists Create Mice With Woolly Mammoth-Like Fur

RESEARCHERS AT A COMPANY IN TEXAS ARE WORKING TO CREATE A LIVING ANIMAL THAT RESEMBLES THE EXTINCT WOOLLY MAMMOTH. Recently, they produced mice with traits of the large mammal. The mice all have coats with mammoth-like fur, and some of the small mammals also have genes that help them store fat. Both features would help the animals survive in the cold Arctic, where the woolly mammoth once lived.

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Cool Sunshade Added to the Nancy Roman Space Telescope

THE NANCY ROMAN SPACE TELESCOPE IS A NEW TELESCOPE THAT NASA IS BUILDING AND WILL LAUNCH INTO SPACE, LIKELY IN EARLY 2027.

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