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The Present

Terraform Mars? How about Earth?

Fauna and flora refuse to go quietly into the Anthropocene.

Image source: Lightspring/Shutterstock

Key Takeaways
  • Pioneers of the Greater Holocene plan to strike back against concrete.
  • Seed packets and plant nutrients are the weapons of choice for standing up to humanity's destructive impact.
  • Hopeless? Maybe. Poignant? Absolutely.

We’re seeing a lot of references to Earth entering a new epoch characterized by all the changes — okay, damage — we’ve wrought upon the planet.

That epoch, of course, is referred to as the Anthropocene, and as soon as the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) decides that we’ve truly left a sufficient enough mark/stain on the place, it’s out of the Holocene and into the Anthropocene we go.

Some people are just not having it, though. In the same way that many pagan believers stood resolute against the onrush of Christianity, Pioneers of the Greater Holocene plan to populate cracks in the conquering Anthropocene with surviving floral of the Holocene.

“The International Union of Geological Sciences is expected soon to proclaim a new epoch dubbed the Anthropocene,” says Pioneers founder, experimental philosopher Jonathon Keats. “While their work is laudable, we need to take it as a challenge. We should do all we can to protect and promote the Holocene, the geological epoch we inherited.”

While no one expects the Pioneers to actually prevent our epoch of reckoning, the (literally) grassroots guerrilla campaign still has something to contribute to the conversation.

Image source: Lukasz Kochanek / Shutterstock

Fudging the geological record

The Holocene era began after the last ice age 11,700 years ago. The word’s meaning is “entirely recent.” However, since atmospheric scientist and Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen popularized the concept of the Anthropocene in 2000, a growing number consider it a sensible delineation given humanity’s track record of mass plant and animal extinctions, pollution, and damage to the atmosphere.

With geologic eras defined by layers they leave in geographical strata, the IUGS hasn’t yet identified an exact point — at which they’d place a “golden spike” — where the Holocene layer would give way to the Anthropocene.

Image source: Pioneers of the Greater Holocene

The plan

What Keats is putting together is a grassroots campaign to terraform — or re-terraform, really — our cities, beginning with a burg under rapid development: San Francisco. “The Bay Area has a reputation for disruption. Preventing a new epoch by re-terraforming the planet is the ultimate disruptive act,” says Keats. He’s proposing a collaboration “with plants, fungi and bacteria to rewild the planet.”

What Keats specifically plans is that native-grass seed packets will be distributed throughout SF, and that these seeds “will take root wherever people spread them, from empty lots to busy streets.” His hope is that “Over time, these grasses will provide the groundwork for forests to flourish within the urban matrix, not as decorative features for humans but as habitats where all species meet as equals.”

In addition to the seed packets, he plans for the San Francisco campaign to involve the distribution of a nutrient mix for “lichens, symbiotic organisms capable of transforming concrete into soil while also purifying the atmosphere.”

The Pioneers, he suggests, will eventually encompass “a global network of concerned humans and other organisms from all phyla.”

Image source: Pioneers of the Greater Holocene

A touching reminder

Big Think readers know Keats as the face behind a number of projects that puckishly illuminate what are actually pretty important ideas, and this one is no exception. Though largely a symbolic and definitely tongue-in-cheek effort, it also aims to serve as reminder of a choice we barely seem to be consciously making: We’re so ready to give up a place that has everything we need, not to mention in a form that’s often achingly beautiful. There’s a certain sweet sadness in the mental image of plants quixotically fighting their way through cracks in pavement and walls to survive.

“This layer of crust we live on is really quite pleasant,” says Keats. He suggests that, even now, “We have the potential to bound the human stratum, and perhaps even to remediate it, putting the Anthropocene behind us as an unfortunate geological interlude.”


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