Image: Andrea Westmoreland
One of the show's recurring conceits is an ominous pyramid containing five “halls of extinction,” representing the mass die-offs the Earth has ever experienced. In yesterday's episode, Neil deGrasse Tyson emphasized the severity of the Permian-Triassic event, skimmed over the Cretaceous-Paleogene event, and implied that we may be on the cusp a sixth mass extinction, as yet unnamed.Given how proactive the show has been about controversial content, it was surprising that the creators didn't go for the jugular on this point. The sixth extinction event does have a name: the Holocene extinction, an event that is currently kickstarting a new era called the Anthropocene. Though this name hasn't yet been officially adopted, a rising number of scientists agree it's time to wave goodbye to the Holocene period, and accept that we have entered the age of the human-shaped planet.The term “Anthropocene” was first coined in the 1980s by freshwater ecologist Eugene F. Stoermer, and it quickly infiltrated the vernacular of many academics, most notably Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen. Though there is still vigorous debate over the fine details of the new epoch, the fact that it is happening is no longer seriously in doubt. Substantial interdisciplinary evidence suggests that the planet is being dramatically sculpted by our species, and that much of the damage is already irreversible.The biological evidence is particularly sobering. Humans have undeniably accelerated the global rate of extinction, and we reduce biodiversity wherever we go (which, unfortunately, is everywhere). Even the usually chipper David Attenborough is pessimistic on this point. “It's not possible to reverse the damage we've done,” he said in a Reddit AMA earlier this year. “We are undoubtedly exterminating species at a speed which has never been known before.”
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