Environment

Time for the Meghalayan: A new geological age has officially been declared

Time for the Meghalayan: A new geological age has officially been declared
Welcome to the Meghalayan age, a newly-confirmed geological age that began 4,200 years ago
Welcome to the Meghalayan age, a newly-confirmed geological age that began 4,200 years ago
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A slice of stalactite from a cave in India provides a geological record for the beginning of the Meghalayan age, some 4,200 years ago
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A slice of stalactite from a cave in India provides a geological record for the beginning of the Meghalayan age, some 4,200 years ago
The International Commission on Stratigraphy has officially divided our current Holocene epoch up into three distinct ages: the Greenlandian, the Northgrippian and the Meghalayan
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The International Commission on Stratigraphy has officially divided our current Holocene epoch up into three distinct ages: the Greenlandian, the Northgrippian and the Meghalayan
Welcome to the Meghalayan age, a newly-confirmed geological age that began 4,200 years ago
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Welcome to the Meghalayan age, a newly-confirmed geological age that began 4,200 years ago
The International Chronostratigraphic Chart has been revised to include the Meghalayan age
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The International Chronostratigraphic Chart has been revised to include the Meghalayan age
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After years of debate, the International Chronostratigraphic Chart has officially been revised. What does that mean, exactly? Our current point in Earth's geological timeline has been updated so that we're now living in the Meghalayan age, which kicked off 4,200 years ago with a catastrophic two-century drought that destroyed several civilizations.

The Geologic Time Scale tracks the history of our planet as a series of subdivided units of time. These are observed as stark changes in the geologic record, brought about by changes in climate, continental shifts, or cataclysms like volcanic eruptions or asteroid impacts. We're currently living in the Holocene epoch, which began 11,700 years ago at the end of the last ice age.

Epochs are usually divided into smaller periods called ages or stages, and while the Holocene has had some informal ones for a while now, the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) has just made three of them official: the Greenlandian, the Northgrippian and the Meghalayan.

The Greenlandian age begins 11,700 years ago, when the Pleistocene epoch first gave way to the Holocene as the warming planet exited the ice age. The Northgrippian kicked off 8,300 years ago, and finally the Meghalayan began some 4,200 years ago. Unfortunately, the first 200 years of this current age were marked by a devastating drought, which rocked established human civilizations in Egypt, Greece, Syria, Palestine, Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley and the Yangtze River Valley.

The fact that the beginning of this age coincides with a cultural shift caused by a global climate event makes it unique, according to Stanley Finney, Secretary General of the International Union of Geological Sciences.

These start dates aren't chosen at random. Before they can be officially ratified, the ICS needs to find clear signs in the strata (rock layers) of the events that triggered the changes. Geologists say they've found evidence in sediments from the sea floor, lake beds, glacial ice and in stalactites and stalacmites from around the world. As specific examples, Greenland ice cores have been preserved that represent the beginnings of the Greenlandian and Northgrippian ages, while a slice of stalactite from a cave in India defines the start of the Meghalayan.

The decision isn't without its controversy, though. According to the BBC, some scientists argue that the move is a little premature, and hasn't been properly debated yet. Another key problem is that it might be stepping on the toes of a widespread debate already underway in the geological world, regarding the Anthropocene.

For a few years now, some scientists have argued that human activity has had such a huge impact on the planet that it may warrant the declaration of a new geological epoch, tentatively dubbed the Anthropocene. The "golden spike" that signals this change has been suggested to date back to the early 1950s, evident in the geological record as plastics, radionuclide fallout from nuclear testing, and increased carbon from fossil fuel use.

Interestingly though, the ICS seems to have left room for the Anthropocene in the revised chart. While the beginnings of the Greenlandian and Northgrippian ages are measured as "b2k" (before the year 2000), the Meghalayan apparently begins 4,200 years before 1950 – the year of the supposed golden spike that marks the beginning of this new human-induced epoch.

Source: International Commission on Stratigraphy [1],[2]

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4 comments
4 comments
EZ
Why'd it take 'em so long?
christopher
When climate change pays your salary, it always helps to kiss its' arse...
And nyer nyer nyer - serves those Egyptians right for not installing solar panels on their pyramids.
Robert in Vancouver
Too bad Al Gore wasn't around 4,200 years ago, he would have prevented the drought that destroyed several civilizations.
Nik
Increased carbon from fossil fuels is trivial on an epoch scale. The original figures on which this fallacy is based were from ice core data. Ice is not an impermeable substance, so trapped CO2 can escape, giving false results. More recent data, based on plant stomata, has revised the figure of atmospheric CO2, at the beginning of the 'industrial revolution' to 360-380 ppm rather than the original 280 ppm, based on ice cores. So the increase is 20-40 ppm, and is incapable of changing climate in any way whatsoever, when considering the CO2 changes from 17 times present, that existed over the past 600 million years, where no ''runaway climate change'' has been evident.