12. Mark Maslin on Human Evolution and the Anthropocene
Episode 12 of the Challenging Climate podcast, hosted by Jesse Reynolds and Pete Irvine, titled "12. Mark Maslin on Human Evolution and the Anthropocene" was published on June 14, 2022 and runs 61 minutes.
June 14, 2022 ·61m · Challenging Climate
Summary
Mark Maslin is a professor of Earth System Science at University College London and a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit scholar. Mark is a leading scientist in past global and regional climatic change and its links to human evolution, and has written dozens of popular science articles and popular books, including The Human Planet: How We Created the Anthropocene (with Simon Lewis) – just out in paperback. In this episode, we spoke with Mark about the link between human evolution a...
Episode Description
Mark Maslin is a professor of Earth System Science at University College London and a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit scholar. Mark is a leading scientist in past global and regional climatic change and its links to human evolution, and has written dozens of popular science articles and popular books, including The Human Planet: How We Created the Anthropocene (with Simon Lewis) – just out in paperback.
In this episode, we spoke with Mark about the link between human evolution and climate change, and the debate surrounding the Anthropocene epoch. In discussing human evolution, we touch on topics such as the development of bipedalism and human intelligence. Mark explains the extent of human impact on the Earth, hence creating the Anthropocene. We also cover the political debate on defining the Anthropocene and the evolution of international and national politics surrounding climate change.
Links:
- Mark’s profile, including his recent publications
- The paper by Mark Maslin and Simon Lewis on defining the Anthropocene
- Another paper by Mark Maslin and Simon Lewis on how the Anthropocene began with species exchange
- That Lancet study
- The Anthropocene working group
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