2014
DOI: 10.1177/2053019614547433
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Prelude to the Anthropocene: Two new North American Land Mammal Ages (NALMAs)

Abstract: Human impacts have left and are leaving distinctive imprints in the geological record. Here we show that in North America, the human-caused changes evident in the mammalian fossil record since c. 14,000 years ago are as pronounced as earlier faunal changes that subdivide Cenozoic epochs into the North American Land Mammal Ages (NALMAs). Accordingly, we define two new North American Land Mammal Ages, the Santarosean and the Saintagustinean, which subdivide Holocene time and complete a biochronologic system that… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Defaunation on land began 10,000 to 100,000 years ago as humans were expanding their range and coming into first contact with novel faunal assemblages (2)(3)(4). By contrast, the physical properties of the marine environment limited our capacity early on to access and eliminate marine animal species.…”
Section: Delayed Defaunation In the Oceansmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Defaunation on land began 10,000 to 100,000 years ago as humans were expanding their range and coming into first contact with novel faunal assemblages (2)(3)(4). By contrast, the physical properties of the marine environment limited our capacity early on to access and eliminate marine animal species.…”
Section: Delayed Defaunation In the Oceansmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is because the signals of anthropogenic change (artefacts, anthropogenically modified vegetal and animal biotas) reflect the expansion and shifting nature of the human domain (e.g. Brown et al, 2013), and significant marker levels such as soil horizons (Gale and Hoare, 2012) are local to regional rather than continent-wide or global signals e and are largely restricted to the terrestrial and coastal realms (for the latter see e.g. Cohen and Lobo, 2013), with the oceans (and hence the accumulation of marine strata) remaining unaffected.…”
Section: Exploring Precise Timing Of the Levelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Paleontologically, Bison is the index taxon for the Rancholabrean, the final North American Land Mammal Age (8)(9)(10). Land Mammal ages are important because, in the absence of other chronological data, they provide a means to infer the age of a locality based on taxonomic assemblages.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%