In 2003 Paul Crutzen and Will Steffen asserted that across Earth’s 4.5-billion-year history no analogue could be found for the Anthropocene. An analogue can, however, be located in the dim Precambrian past when, through oxygenic photosynthesis, cyanobacteria produced enough oxygen to alter the composition and character of the Earth System. The ‘Great Oxygenation Event’ that followed wiped out much of Earth’s anaerobic life while giving rise to all subsequent aerobic life. It also offers a clear comparison with the Anthropocene that implicates how we think about our current predicament.
AkensonDH (1998) Surpassing Wonder: The Invention of the Bible and the Talmuds. Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
2.
AnbarADRomanielloSJAllenbyBRet al. (2016) Addressing the Anthropocene. Environmental Chemistry13: 777–783.
3.
BashfordA (2013) The Anthropocene in modern history: Reflections on climate and Australian deep time. Australian Historical Studies44: 341–349.
4.
BonneuilCFressozJ-B (2017) The Shock of the Anthropocene: The Earth, History and Us. FernbachD (trans.). London: Verso.
5.
CanfieldDE (2005) The early history of oxygen: Homage to Robert M. Garrels. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Science33: 1–36.
6.
CanfieldDE (2014) Oxygen: A Four Billion Year History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
7.
CanfieldDEGlazerANFalkowskiPG (2010) The evolution and future of Earth’s nitrogen cycle. Science330: 192–196.
8.
CrononW (1996) The trouble with wilderness: Or, getting back to the wrong nature. Environmental History1: 7–28.
9.
CrutzenPJSteffenW (2003) How long have we been in an Anthropocene era? An editorial comment. Climatic Change61: 251–257.
10.
CrutzenPJStoermerE (2000) The ‘Anthropocene’. International Geosphere-Biosphere Newsletter41: 17–18.
11.
DelantyGMotaA (2017) Governing the Anthropocene: Agency, governance, knowledge. European Journal of Social Theory20: 9–38.
12.
DirzoRYoungHSGalettiMet al. (2014) Defaunation in the Anthropocene. Science345: 401–406.
13.
DotterweichMIvesterAHHansonPRet al. (2014) Natural and human-induced prehistoric and historical soil erosion and landscape development in southwestern Tennessee, USA. Anthropocene8: 6–24.
14.
FischerWWHempJValentineJS (2016) How did life survive Earth’s great oxygenation?Current Opinion in Chemical Biology31: 166–178.
15.
FrankAKleidonAAlbertiM (2017) Earth as a hybrid planet: The Anthropocene in an evolutionary astrobiological context. Anthropocene18: 13–21.
16.
HamiltonC (2015) Getting the Anthropocene so wrong. Anthropocene Review2: 102–107.
17.
HamiltonC (2016) The Anthropocene as rupture. Anthropocene Review3: 93–106.
18.
KochABrierleyCMaslinMAet al. (2019) Earth System impacts of the European arrival and great dying in the Americas after 1492. Quaternary Science Reviews207: 13–36.
19.
LatourB (1993) We Were Never Modern. Trans. PorterC. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
20.
LewisSLMaslinMA (2015) Defining the Anthropocene. Nature519: 171–180.
21.
LoLChangS-PWeiK-Yet al. (2017) Nonlinear climatic sensitivity to greenhouse gases over past 4 glacial/interglacial cycles. Scientific Reports7: 1–7.
22.
LovelockJE (1979) Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
23.
LyonsTWReinhardCTPlanavskyNJ (2014) The rise of oxygen in Earth’s early ocean and atmosphere. Nature506: 307.
24.
MaslinMALewisSL (2015) Anthropocene: Earth System, geological, philosophical and political paradigm shifts. Anthropocene Review2: 108–116.
RozhnovSV (2013) At the dawn of the aerobic biosphere: The effect of oxygen on the development of biota in the proterozoic and early palaeozoic. Paleontological Journal47: 961–972.
27.
RuddimanWF (2013) The Anthropocene. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences41: 45–68.
28.
SciutoKMoroI (2015) Cyanobacteria: The bright and dark sides of a charming group. Biodiversity Conservation24: 711–738.
29.
SmytheKR (2014) Rethinking humanity in the Anthropocene: The long view of humans and nature. Sustainability7: 146–153.
30.
WatersCNZelasciewiczJSummerhayesCet al. (2016a) The Anthropocene is functionally and stratigraphically distinct from the Holocene. Science351: 2622.