On Sun, Apr 25, 2021 at 10:53 AM Keith Sanborn <mrz...@panix.com> wrote:

> Interesting that at a time when planetary survival is in jeopardy,
> analysts shd return to a geological metaphor. Does history then equal
> stratigraphy?
>

That is exactly the claim. The geologists of the Anthropocene Working Group
identify the stratum marking the end of the Holocene in radioactive
isotopes left by nuclear fallout in the period of above-ground testing
(1952-63). These can be identified in fine layers deposited in undisturbed
lake beds around the world, and most precisely, in ice cores from
Antarctica. Of course, geological markers based on the activity of living
creatures are nothing new. What's new is that the creatures are humans, and
the rate of change, particularly in CO2 concentration, is faster than
anything previously recorded, by orders of magnitude.

The dating of the new geological epoch is hotly contested, and in my view,
the other proposed dates (Industrial revolution, colonization of the New
World) are full of significance. Colonialism inaugurates a form of
domination, the enslavement of people on plantations, that allowed early
cycles of capital accumulation to proceed through the plunder of the rest
of the planet. The formally "free" labor of the Industrial Revolution could
only compete with colonial domination because the life of previous
geological epochs was brought out of the ground and sent back into the
atmosphere by the burning of coal and oil.  However, the big changes in
atmospheric and oceanic chemistry only become clearly measurable in the
1950s, and they are correlated with the particular form of technological
development that begins in the US during WWII, then spreads around the
planet afterwards. The contemporary US state is brought to account with the
1950s date, along with all those that emulate it. The present US
administration shows some dawning awareness of these things. If you're
interested, I and a couple friends made a short video and a long text about
these issues:

https://vimeo.com/374696808

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2053019620975803

Basically it's a depth interpretation of the Superman festival held every
year in the tiny town of Metropolis, Illinois....

best, Brian
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