PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Sediment core analysis supports new epoch characterized by human impact on planet

Researchers conclude humans have had as much of an impact on the landscape as the retreat of the glaciers at the end of the Ice Age

Sediment core analysis supports new epoch characterized by human impact on planet
2023-10-25
(Press-News.org)

Scientists have long debated the Anthropocene Epoch, a proposed unit of geologic time corresponding to the most recent period in history. It’s characterized by substantial human impact on the planet.

Are we living in the Anthropocene? And if we are, then when did it start? 

In a research article published this month in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, The University of Toledo’s Dr. Trisha Spanbauer and Stanford University’s Dr. M. Allison Stegner lend credence to the argument for its existence. The pair analyzed open-source data to track vegetation changes across North America since the end of the Pleistocene Epoch, and conclude that humans have had as much of an impact on the landscape as the retreat of the glaciers at the end of the Ice Age. 

“As a paleolimnologist I’m very interested in what the past can tell us about the future,” said Spanbauer, an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences. “Biotic changes have been used to demarcate epochs in the past, so this analysis gives us valuable context to understand if what we’re seeing today is fundamentally similar in magnitude to what we would have seen at the shift between the Pleistocene Epoch and the Holocene Epoch.” 

Spanbauer and Stegner utilized the Neotoma Paleoecology Database, a community-curated repository for multiple kinds of paleoecological data. They specifically looked at fossil pollen data sourced from 386 sediment cores records taken from lakes across North America.

Sediment cores are samples taken from the bottom of a lake that preserve the depositional sequence. Spanbauer and Stegner considered samples taken as early as the late Pleistocene – around 14,000 years ago. 

They analyzed the data according to seven metrics: taxonomic richness, meaning the diversity of pollen species; first appearance datum, last appearance datum, and short-term gain and loss of taxa, measuring the frequency with which species appear and disappear in fossil records; and abrupt community changes, referring to species identified in the samples. They organized their data points within 250-year time periods and on both continental and regional scales, and incorporated age-model uncertainty and accounted for differences in sample size to generate conservative estimates. 

Their results indicate that vegetation changes within the last few hundred years are comparable to those accompanying the last epochal transition, including increases in first and last appearances as well as abrupt community changes.

“The power of a database like this is that we’re able to ask questions about macroscale ecological changes,” Spanbauer said. “Scientists have documented the effects of human activity on single species and on biodiversity in general, but our research puts these observations into a much broader context. It indicates a change in how ecosystems are functioning that supports the delineation of a new epoch.” 

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Sediment core analysis supports new epoch characterized by human impact on planet

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Romance or nomance? Adolescents prefer to see less sex, more friendships, platonic relationships on screen

2023-10-25
Key takeaways 47.5% of respondents ages 13–24 feel most TV shows and movie plots don’t need sexual content; 51.5% want to see more focus on friendships and platonic relationships. 56% of those aged 10–24 prefer original content over franchises and remakes. Twice as many adolescents prefer binge releases over weekly drops. Adolescents want to see lives like their own depicted on screen. This year’s Teens & Screens report from UCLA’s Center for Scholars & Storytellers, or CSS, found that teens — plus the 18- to 24-year-old demographic that advertisers typically ...

UK air pollution regulations will reduce deaths, but do little to protect ecosystems

2023-10-25
Existing air pollution regulations will reduce thousands of premature adult deaths in the UK, but even the most effective technically feasible actions, which will save thousands more lives, will do little to protect the country’s sensitive ecosystems, find UCL researchers. The new research, published in GeoHealth, found that existing air pollution regulations could avoid 6,751 early deaths amongst adults in the UK by 2030 compared to if no regulations existed. That estimate nearly doubles to 13,269 avoided adult premature deaths if all possible technically feasible measures are employed to reduce air pollution immediately.  However, existing regulations don’t ...

Brain-computer interface restores control of home devices for Johns Hopkins patient with ALS

Brain-computer interface restores control of home devices for Johns Hopkins patient with ALS
2023-10-25
It’s the day after the Baltimore Orioles clinched the American League East Championship with their 100th win of the season, and lifelong fan Tim Evans is showing his pride on his sleeve. “It’s so great,” Evans, 62, says with a huge smile, wearing his orange O’s jersey. The last time the Orioles won the AL East was in 2014, the same year Evans was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive nervous system disease that causes muscle weakness and loss of motor and speech functions. Evans currently has severe speech and swallowing problems. He can talk slowly, but it’s hard for most people to understand him.   However, ...

Screen printed electrodes for measuring endothelial barrier integrity

Screen printed electrodes for measuring endothelial barrier integrity
2023-10-25
(LOS ANGELES) – October 25, 2023 - The Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation (TIBI) has developed a novel organ-on-a-chip device for measuring electrical resistance across endothelial barriers. This chip had carbon-based, screen-printed electrodes incorporated into a multi-layered, microfluidic chip fabricated by a simple and cost-effective method. Endothelial cells line blood and lymph vessels of the body and form a barrier layer which controls the flow of fluid and substances to and from the vessels and surrounding tissues. Study of the crucial roles ...

UTSA researchers receive $3.6 million National Science Foundation grant to break down language barriers in engineering education

UTSA researchers receive $3.6 million National Science Foundation grant to break down language barriers in engineering education
2023-10-25
(SAN ANTONIO, OCTOBER 25, 2023)—The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded a five-year, $3.6 million grant to two professors at The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) to develop a better way to communicate engineering acumen to diverse engineering classes. Joel Alejandro Mejia and M. Sidury Christiansen are collaborating on an ethnographic project, “Rhetorical Engineering Education to Support Proactive Equity Teaching and Outcomes (RESPETO).” The project will include a handbook of recommended pedagogical approaches to address exclusionary language and linguistic practices in engineering classes. The project was motivated by several factors. Among them, ...

Marketing research is too narrow: Hw the field must change to keep producing relevant, timely knowledge

2023-10-25
Researchers from TU Dortmund University and RWTH Aachen University published a new Journal of Marketing article that examines how specific types of marketing knowledge contributions have developed over the past few decades and suggests ways to move the field toward “big picture” theories that will have greater impact. The study, forthcoming in the Journal of Marketing, is titled “Conceptual Contributions in Marketing Scholarship: Patterns, Mechanisms, and Rebalancing Options” and is authored by Bastian Kindermann, ...

Sunflower extract fights fungi to keep blueberries fresh

2023-10-25
Opening a clamshell of berries and seeing them coated in fuzzy mold is a downer. And it’s no small problem. Gray mold and other fungi, which cause fruit to rot, lead to significant economic losses and food waste. Now, researchers report in ACS’ Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry that compounds from sunflower crop waste prevented rotting in blueberries. They suggest the food industry could use these natural compounds to protect against postharvest diseases. Sunflowers are cultivated around the world for their seeds and oil, but the flower stems — known as receptacles — are generally considered to be a waste product. Noting that this crop is particularly ...

Global platform study presents results to guide care of severely ill patients with COVID-19 using routinely available drugs

Global platform study presents results to guide care of severely ill patients with COVID-19 using routinely available drugs
2023-10-25
The Global Coalition for Adaptive Research (GCAR) in collaboration with the University of Pittsburgh and UPMC, on behalf of the REMAP-CAP Investigator Network, announce clinical trial results examining the use of vitamin C and simvastatin to treat severely ill patients with COVID-19. Published today in JAMA and NEJM, and presented at the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine in Milan, the studies are part of the ongoing Randomized Embedded Multifactorial Adaptive Platform for Community Acquired Pneumonia (REMAP-CAP) trial. Simvastatin, a widely available and inexpensive drug that is included on the WHO list of essential medicines, ...

Intravenous Vitamin C for patients hospitalized with COVID-19

2023-10-25
About The Study: In hospitalized patients with COVID-19, vitamin C had low probability of improving the primary composite outcome of organ support–free days and hospital survival in two harmonized randomized clinical trials.  Authors: Neill K. J. Adhikari, M.D.C.M., M.Sc., of the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, and Francois Lamontagne, M.D., M.Sc., of the Universite de Sherbrooke in Sherbrooke, Canada, are the corresponding authors. To access the embargoed study: ...

Sigh ventilation in patients with trauma

2023-10-25
About The Study: In a randomized clinical trial including 524 trauma patients receiving mechanical ventilation with risk factors for developing acute respiratory distress syndrome, the addition of sigh breaths did not significantly increase ventilator-free days. Prespecified secondary outcome data suggest that sighs are well-tolerated and may improve clinical outcomes.  Authors: Richard K. Albert, M.D., of the University of Colorado, Denver, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jama.2023.21739) Editor’s Note: Please see the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Promising TB therapy safe for patients with HIV

American Academy of Pediatrics examines the impact of school expulsion and recommends ways to create supportive learning environments for all students

Most pregnant people got vaccinated for COVID-19 in 2022

Coral reef destruction a threat to human rights

Tongan volcanic eruption triggered by explosion as big as ‘five underground nuclear bombs’

Syrian hamsters reveal genetic secret to hibernation

Tracking microplastics: FAMU-FSU College of Engineering researcher helps discover how microplastics move for better storm water management

The Lancet Psychiatry: Conversion practice linked to greater risk of mental health symptoms, surveys of LGBTQ+ people in the USA suggest

Most accurate ultrasound test could detect 96% of women with ovarian cancer

Sylvester study: MRI provides early warning system for glioblastoma growth

Making soybeans smarter

New wearable laser device monitors brain blood flow to gauge stroke risk

BU professor receives $29M NIH grant to study dementia risk factors, prevention, and treatment

Ninth Circuit reverses lower court, reinforces FDA's authority to regulate unproven stem cell products

Wnt happens in kidney development?

Where flood policy helps most — and where it could do more

Combining AI and thermal video offers a new window into weightlifting

Childhood social interactions combat stereotypes

Researchers harness liquid crystal structures to design simple, yet versatile bifocal lenses

Suicide attempts decreased after adding suicide care to primary care, study finds

One in three Americans has a dysfunctional metabolism, but intermittent fasting could help

Time-restricted eating associated with greater blood sugar control and fat loss than standard nutrition counseling

New imaging technique brings us closer to simplified, low-cost agricultural quality assessment

Purdue-led TOMI project receives $3.5M grant to turn a decade of data into new tools and strategies for tomato farmers

Could a bout of COVID protect you from a severe case of flu?

When detecting depression, the eyes have it

NRG Oncology trial implies the addition of atezolizumab concurrently to standard of care does not improve survival in limited-stage small cell lung cancer

NRG Oncology trial supports radiotherapy and cisplatin should remain the standard of care for p16+ oropharyngeal cancer

Progression of subclinical atherosclerosis predicts all-cause mortality risk

Presence of subclinical atherosclerosis is marker of mortality and its progression increases risk of death

[Press-News.org] Sediment core analysis supports new epoch characterized by human impact on planet
Researchers conclude humans have had as much of an impact on the landscape as the retreat of the glaciers at the end of the Ice Age