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Stoermer, Eugene

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Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2011
Earth Sciences History (2011) 30 (1): 63–84.
...Robert V. Davis ABSTRACT In 1833, Charles Lyell proposed that the current post-glacial geological epoch be termed Recent. In the late 1860s, Paul Gervais suggested Holocene as a more appropriate name for the same epoch. In 2000, Paul Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer jointly proposed that a new epoch...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 September 2004
Geology (2004) 32 (9): 745–748.
...Erik J. Ekdahl; Jane L. Teranes; Thomas P. Guilderson; Charles L. Turton; John H. McAndrews; Chad A. Wittkop; Eugene F. Stoermer Abstract Cultural eutrophication—the process by which human activities increase nutrient input rates to aquatic ecosystems and thereby cause undesirable changes...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2020
Earth Sciences History (2020) 39 (2): 363–370.
... studies at the crossroads of the natural sciences, the social sciences and the humanities, which run under the label of ‘Anthropocene’, reflect on the origins of the human induced environmental disaster we live in. The term is a neologism coined by Paul Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer; it stems from geology...
Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 24 March 2025
PALAIOS (2025) 40 (3): 88–99.
... of Lakeside’s Diatom class Eugene Stoermer, Sarah Spaulding, Marina Potapova, and Sylvia Lee and all the students, researchers, and assistants at Lakeside who contributed to Ashfall collections and counts, especially Claire Serieyssol Bleser, Wendy Slijk, Katie Johnson, Jeremy Walls, Steve Main, Meredith Tyree...
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Journal Article
Published: 03 October 2018
Scottish Journal of Geology (2018) 54 (2): 117–123.
... changes currently affecting the Earth may be seen as echoes of his Seventh Epoch, defined as ‘the state in which we today see Nature is as much our work as its own’. The translators’ Introduction suggests that this lies close to the concept of the Anthropocene, first proposed by Paul Crutzen and Eugene...
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 01 January 2014
DOI: 10.1144/SP395.1
EISBN: 9781862396715
... & Eugene Stoermer (2000) to denote the present time interval, in which many geologically significant processes and conditions have been, and continue to be, profoundly altered by human activities. Processes include changes in erosion and sediment transport resulting from agriculture and urbanization...