Caption: Anthropocene and Heard, Credit: Seth Shostak
Image by: Seth Shostak 
Anthropocene and Heard 

Anthropocene and Heard

Series: Big Picture Science
From: Big Picture Science
Length: 00:54:00

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Biololgy, evolution, climate science, sociology, economics, civilization, archaeology Read the full description.

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What’s in a name? “Holocene” defines the geologic epoch we’re in. Or were in? Goodbye to “Holocene” and hello “Anthropocene!” Yes, scientists may actually re-name our geologic era as the “Age of Man” due to the profound impact we’ve had on the planet.

We’ll examine why we’ve earned this new monikor and who votes on such a thing. Plus, discover the strongest evidence for human-caused climate change.

Also, why cities should be celebrated, not reviled… a musing over the possible fate of alien civilizations … and waste not: what an unearthed latrine – and its contents – reveal about ancient Roman habit and diet.

Guests:

  William Steffen – Climate scientist and the Executive Director of the Climate Change Institute at the Australian National University, Canberra

  Simon Donner – Geographer at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver

  Edward Glaeser – Economist, Harvard University, author of Triumph of the City: How Our Greatest Invention Makes Us Richer, Smarter, Greener, Healthier, and Happier

  Douglas Vakoch – Director of Interstellar Message Composition at the SETI Institute

  Mark Robinson – Director of Environmental Archaeology at the University of Oxford

  Erica Rowan – Doctoral student, University of Oxford

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Piece Description

What’s in a name? “Holocene” defines the geologic epoch we’re in. Or were in? Goodbye to “Holocene” and hello “Anthropocene!” Yes, scientists may actually re-name our geologic era as the “Age of Man” due to the profound impact we’ve had on the planet.

We’ll examine why we’ve earned this new monikor and who votes on such a thing. Plus, discover the strongest evidence for human-caused climate change.

Also, why cities should be celebrated, not reviled… a musing over the possible fate of alien civilizations … and waste not: what an unearthed latrine – and its contents – reveal about ancient Roman habit and diet.

Guests:

  William Steffen – Climate scientist and the Executive Director of the Climate Change Institute at the Australian National University, Canberra

  Simon Donner – Geographer at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver

  Edward Glaeser – Economist, Harvard University, author of Triumph of the City: How Our Greatest Invention Makes Us Richer, Smarter, Greener, Healthier, and Happier

  Douglas Vakoch – Director of Interstellar Message Composition at the SETI Institute

  Mark Robinson – Director of Environmental Archaeology at the University of Oxford

  Erica Rowan – Doctoral student, University of Oxford

Broadcast History

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Additional Files

Additional Credits

Seth Shostak – Host and Producer
Molly Bentley – Co-Host and Executive Producer
Gary Niederhoff – Producer
Barbara Vance – Production Assistant
Jay Weiler - Assistant

Related Website

http://radio.seti.org