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    Scale And Diversity Of The Physical Technosphere: A Geological Perspective

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    Date
    2016
    Author
    Jan, Zalasiewicz
    Mark, Williams
    Waters, Colin N
    Barnosky, Anthony D
    John, Palmesino
    Ro nnskog, A.-S.
    Matt, Edgeworth
    Cath, Neal
    Alejandro, Cearreta
    Ellis, Erle C
    Grinevald, Jacques
    Peter, Haff
    Juliana, Assunção Ivar do Sul
    Catherine, Jeandel
    Leinfelder, Reinhold
    McNeill, John R
    Odada, Eric
    Oreskes, Naomi
    Simon, James P
    Andrew, Revkin
    Will, Steffen
    Summerhayes, C. P.
    Davor, Vidas
    Wing, Scott L
    Wolfe, Alexander P
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    We assess the scale and extent of the physical technosphere, defined here as the summed material output of the contemporary human enterprise. It includes active urban, agricultural and marine components, used to sustain energy and material flow for current human life, and a growing residue layer, currently only in small part recycled back into the active component. Preliminary estimates suggest a technosphere mass of approximately 30 trillion tonnes (Tt), which helps support a human biomass that, despite recent growth, is ~5 orders of magnitude smaller. The physical technosphere includes a large, rapidly growing diversity of complex objects that are potential trace fossils or ‘technofossils’. If assessed on palaeontological criteria, technofossil diversity already exceeds known estimates of biological diversity as measured by richness, far exceeds recognized fossil diversity, and may exceed total biological diversity through Earth’s history. The rapid transformation of much of Earth’s surface mass into the technosphere and its myriad components underscores the novelty of the current planetary transformation.
    URI
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/311093683_Scale_and_diversity_of_the_physical_technosphere_A_geological_perspective
    http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke/handle/11295/106930
    Publisher
    University of Nairobi
    Collections
    • Faculty of Science & Technology (FST) [4284]

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