Lunchtime Discovery: Evidence of the Anthropocene in Crawford Lake, Ontario

  • Wednesday, September 18, 2024
  • 12:00pm - 1:00pm

From a platform in the lake, the team lowers a hollow metal tube (a freeze core) filled with dry ice and ethanol to collect sediment from the lake bottom.From a platform in the lake, the team lowers a hollow metal tube (a freeze core) filled with dry ice and ethanol to collect sediment from the lake bottom. (Photo courtesy Brock University)

And Why It matters

Dr. Francine McCarthy, Geology Professor and Chair of the Department of Earth Sciences at Brock University, Ontario, Canada

Dr. Francine McCarthy, a geology professor and Chair of the Department of Earth Sciences at Brock University in Ontario, Canada, has spent her career researching geological evidence of planetary change. Her recent research at Crawford Lake in Ontario has produced evidence through the lake’s layered sediment that human impact has changed the Earth, leading us into a new geological period or epoch: the Anthropocene. McCarthy notes that by strict convention we are still living in the Holocene – but is this societally relevant and does it accurately describe our planet today?

Join us on YouTube!


Live Virtual Presentation hosted by NC Museum of Natural Sciences’ SECU Daily Planet Curator Chris Smith and the NC Department of Environmental Quality Office of Environmental Education and Public Affairs staff.

You can post questions in the YouTube chat or tweet questions to #LunchTimeDiscovery and mention @NorthCarolinaEE.

Brought to you by the NC DEQ Office of Environmental Education and Public Affairs and the NC Museum of Natural Sciences.

Details

Date:
September 18
Times:
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Fee:
Free

Venue

Virtual
NC United States

Organizer

Chris Smith
919.707.9296