Saturday, January 7, 2023: 8:30 AM
Regency Ballroom A (Loews Philadelphia Hotel)
In 2018, the United Nations IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) explicitly recognized Anthropocene science as the overarching framework for understanding all planetary change including climate change. Recent publications such as Zoltán Simon's History in Times of Unprecedented Change (2019) show that historians are now engaged in a similar intellectual exercise of exploring alternative frameworks for understanding the relationship between Earth history and human history. This paper briefly describes the emergence of the Anthropocene concept and argues that although Earth history and human history may be said to
have merged, it does not follow that the practices of Earth System scientists and historians must merge.
have merged, it does not follow that the practices of Earth System scientists and historians must merge.
See more of: Deep History, Current History
See more of: The Anthropocene versus Climate Change as Historical Frameworks
See more of: AHA Sessions
See more of: The Anthropocene versus Climate Change as Historical Frameworks
See more of: AHA Sessions
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