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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: i-node who wrote (985856)12/6/2016 7:21:10 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) of 1578511
 
Humans Have Made 30 Trillion Tons of Stuff

That's 110 pounds per square meter of the Earth's surface

By Michael Harthorne, Newser Staff
newser.com

(NEWSER) – Humans have built a ton of things to keep us alive on this twirling little rock: farms, airports, roads, CDs, houses, computers, landfills, and so forth. All these things are known as the technosphere, and for the first time ever—in a study published last month in the Anthropocene Review—scientists have estimated their total weight: an impressive 30 trillion tons. According to Forbes, that's "enough to add another good-sized mountain to the Appalachians, or perhaps even to the Rockies." Or as a press release breaks it down, it's roughly 110 pounds per square meter of the Earth's surface. Researchers say the technosphere is a "major new phenomenon on this planet" that is "evolving extraordinarily rapidly." It's also a handy means of measuring how much humans have shaped the planet.

Scientists argue that the sheer scale of the technosphere is convincing evidence that we're living in a new, as-yet-unofficial geologic epoch known as the "Anthropocene," Gizmodo reports. The quickest way to be recognized as an epoch is to have a discernible fossil record, and due to the fact that the technosphere is—unlike the biosphere—"remarkably poor at recycling its own materials," that shouldn't be a problem. If "technofossils" from the Anthropocene were classified like normal fossils, there would more than a billion different types, outnumbering the types of species currently alive. (Scientists say Earth entered a new age around 1950.)
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