Science, Politics, and the Anthropocene Working Group

ebook What was the Anthropocene? · Routledge Studies in the History of Science, Technology and Medicine

By Alex Damianos

cover image of Science, Politics, and the Anthropocene Working Group

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Between 2009 and 2024, the Anthropocene Working Group, an interdisciplinary team of geologists, archaeologists, Earth systems scientists, historians of science, and one lawyer, sought to formalise the Anthropocene as a formal unit of the Geologic Time Scale. Science, Politics, and the Anthropocene Working Group: What was the Anthropocene? presents the only comprehensive, ethnographic and history of science study of the Anthropocene Working Group's formalisation effort. Drawing on original archival research, this book provides a history of the formalisation procedure, as well as the practices of measurement and correlation, particular to the amendment of the Geologic Time Scale.

Through participant observation, this book explains how the Anthropocene Working Group those methods and practices to situate contemporary society within the context of 4.5 billion years of Earth history. Positioning contemporary debates concerning the Anthropocene within a historical appraisal of geoscience, What was the Anthropocene? offers a unique, multidisciplinary perspective on how scientific knowledge is shaped and legitimised under conditions of climate crisis. Science, Politics, and the Anthropocene Working Group: What was the Anthropocene? provides an invaluable resource for scholars of all levels studying geosciences, the history of science, social studies of science, and the Anthropocene.

Science, Politics, and the Anthropocene Working Group