Earth:Anthroposphere

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Short description: Part of the environment that is affected by humans


The anthroposphere can be viewed as a human-generated equivalent to the biosphere. While the biosphere is the total biomass of the Earth and its interaction with its systems, the anthroposphere is the total mass of human-generated systems and materials, including the human population, and its interaction with the Earth's systems. A recent study estimated the mass of anthropogenic creations as 1.1 trillion tons in 2020, equivalent to the mass of all living organisms that comprise the biosphere.[1] However, while the biosphere is able to efficiently produce and recycle materials through processes like photosynthesis and decomposition, the anthroposphere is highly inefficient at sustaining itself. As human technology becomes more evolved, such as that required to launch objects into orbit or to cause deforestation, the impact of human activities on the environment potentially increases. The anthroposphere is the youngest of all the Earth's spheres, yet has made an enormous impact on the Earth and its systems in a very short time.[2]

Some consider the term anthroposphere to be synonymous with the noosphere, though the noosphere is often used to refer specifically to the sphere of rational human thought, or ‘the terrestrial sphere of thinking substance’.[3]

Aspects of the anthroposphere include: mines from which minerals are obtained; mechanized agriculture and transportation which support the global food system; oil and gas fields; computer-based systems including the Internet; educational systems; landfills; factories; atmospheric pollution; artificial satellites in space, both active satellites and space junk; forestry and deforestation; urban development; transportation systems including roads, highways, and subways; nuclear installations; warfare.

Technofossils are another interesting aspect of the anthroposphere. These can include objects like mobile phones that contain a diverse range of metals and man-made materials, raw materials like aluminum that do not exist in nature, and agglomerations of plastics created in areas like the Pacific Garbage Patch and on the beaches of the Pacific Islands.[4]

See also

  • Anthropocene
  • Anthropogenic metabolism
  • biomass
  • space junk

References

  1. Elhacham, Emily; Ben-Uri, Liad; Grozovski, Jonathan; Bar-On, Yinon; Milo, Ron (2020). "Global human-made mass exceeds all living biomass". Nature. doi:10.1038/s41586-020-3010-5. 
  2. Haff, P. K. (2013-10-24). "Technology as a geological phenomenon: implications for human well-being". Geological Society, London, Special Publications (Geological Society of London) 395 (1): 301–309. doi:10.1144/sp395.4. ISSN 0305-8719. 
  3. Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre (1964). The Future of Man. London: Collins. p. 157. 
  4. Zalasiewicz, Jan (2017). "Scale and diversity of the physical technosphere: A geological perspective". The Anthropocene Review 4 (1): 9–22. 

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