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Earth entered a new epoch on July 16, 1945 — and that's just the beginning of how humans have changed the planet

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  • A new study is the first of its kind to catalog all the minerals created either principally or exclusively as a result of human activities
  • It concludes that people are responsible for 208 minerals, or roughly 4% of all the minerals on Earth
  • The finding adds further evidence to the idea that we are living in the Anthropocene epoch as opposed to the previous Holocene epoch
  • The vast majority of the new minerals are the result of one activity: mining

If you've ever hiked in the woods or picnicked in a park, you've probably heard of the concept "leave no trace." The 90s-era conservation ethics code encourages people to clean up after themselves after a stint in nature, being careful to leave no trace of their activity.

It's nice idea for personal practice, but our record as a species will not be so easily expunged from planet Earth.

Human beings have so fundamentally altered the geology of the planet, in fact, that scientists named a brand-new geologic epoch after us: the Anthropocene.

Many scientists say the Anthropocene started on July 16, 1945, when humans detonated the first atomic bomb and left a powerful chemical marker in the geological record that's detectable with radioactive isotopes. Other experts say the exact beginning may be a bit fuzzier.

Regardless of the precise date, one thing is certain: Our footprint on the planet — based at least partially on the materials we've created, moved around, or just left behind — will be visible for millions, or even billions, of years.

A new paper catalogs hundreds of these new materials for the first time, and estimates that humans are responsible for roughly 4% of all the minerals on Earth. Some formed along the slippery walls of mines, where cool, moist air reacted with sooty particles of iron ore; others were created in the depths of the ocean as ancient shipwrecks were eroded by the salty sea.

"These minerals will mark our age as different from all that came before,"Edward Grew, a professor of earth and climate sciences at the University of Maine and a leading author on the new study, told Business Insider.

NASA images of Earth

Put another way, humans are responsible for creating the most new minerals on Earth since oxygen first appeared in the atmosphere more than 2.2 billion years ago. Although now considered an essential component of life, oxygen's first appearance drastically altered the planet's make-up, giving rise to as many as two-thirds of the more than 5,200 minerals that are officially recognized today.

"If The Great Oxidation ... was a 'punctuation event' in Earth's history, the rapid and extensive geological impact of the Anthropocene is an exclamation mark,"Robert Hazen, a mineralogist and astrobiologist at the Carnegie Institution for Science's Geophysical Laboratory, told Business Insider.

So where do these minerals come from and what do they look like?

SEE ALSO: The US will be totally unrecognizable by the end of this century

The new study catalogs 208 new minerals that were created either principally or exclusively as a result of human activities. The vast majority are the result of one activity: mining.



The dumping of ore, the build-up of water along mine tunnel walls, and fires inside mines can all contribute to this process. "When one looks at a mine, it’s really a disturbance of the Earth’s surface," said Grew.



The glowing, sea-colored mineral simonkolleite shown below was found on an copper mining tool at the Rowley Mine in Maricopa County, Arizona. "You’re just stirring a pot in a way, exposing ores to a different environment and getting these new minerals to form," Grew added.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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