Game Changer in Soil Science. The Anthropocene in soil science and pedology.
The venerable science of pedology, initiated in the 19th century as the study of the natural factors of soil formation, is adapting to the demands of the Anthropocene, the geologic time during which planet Earth and its soils are transitioning from natural to human-natural systems. With vast areas of soils intensively managed, the future of pedology lies with a renewed science that can be called anthropedology that builds on the pedology of the past but proceeds from “human as outsider” to “human as insider.” In other words, the human in pedology must shift from being a soil-disturbing to soil-forming agent. Pedology is well prepared to respond to the challenges of the Anthropocene, given the decades of research on human-soil relations throughout human history and throughout the period of the Great Acceleration (Steffen et al., [76]). However, quantitative understanding of soil responses to the diversity of human forcings remains elementary and needs remedy.
Duke Scholars
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- Agronomy & Agriculture
- 4106 Soil sciences
- 3108 Plant biology
- 3004 Crop and pasture production
- 0703 Crop and Pasture Production
- 0607 Plant Biology
- 0503 Soil Sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Agronomy & Agriculture
- 4106 Soil sciences
- 3108 Plant biology
- 3004 Crop and pasture production
- 0703 Crop and Pasture Production
- 0607 Plant Biology
- 0503 Soil Sciences