This timeline lists events in the external environment that have influenced events in human history. This timeline is for use with the article on environmental determinism. For the history of humanity's influence on the environment, and humanity's perspective on this influence, see timeline of history of environmentalism. See List of periods and events in climate history for a timeline list focused on climate.
Pre-Holocene (1.5 Ma)
editThe time from roughly 15,000 to 5,000 BCE was a time of transition, and swift and extensive environmental change, as the planet was moving from an Ice age, towards an interstadial (warm period). Sea levels rose dramatically (and are continuing to do so), land that was depressed by glaciers began lifting up again, forests and deserts expanded, and the climate gradually became more modern. In the process of warming up, the planet saw several "cold snaps" and "warm snaps", such as the Older Dryas and the Holocene climatic optimum, as well as heavier precipitation. In addition, the Pleistocene megafauna became extinct due to environmental and evolutionary pressures from the changing climate. This marked the end of the Quaternary extinction event, which was continued into the modern era by humans. The time around 11,700 years ago (9,700 BC) is widely considered to be the end of the old age (Pleistocene, Paleolithic, Stone Age, Wisconsin Ice Age), and the beginning of the modern world as we know it.
Year(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 2,588,000 BC | c. 12,000 BC | Pleistocene era |
c. 21,000 BC | Recent evidence indicates that humans processed (gathered) and consumed wild cereal grains as far back as 23,000 years ago.[1] | |
c. 20,000 BC | Antarctica sees a very rapid and abrupt 6 °C increase in temperatures[2] | |
c. 19,000 BC | Last Glacial Maximum/sea-level minimum | |
c. 20,000 BC | c. 12,150 BC | Mesolithic 1 period |
c. 17,000 BC | c. 13,000 BC | Oldest Dryas stadial (cool period) during the last Ice age/glaciation in Europe. |
c. 13,000 BC | Beginning of the Holocene extinction. Earliest evidence of warfare.
Meltwater pulse 1A raises sea level 20 meters. Missoula floods occur. | |
c. 12,670 BC | c. 12,000 BC | Bølling oscillation interstadial (warm and moist period) between the Oldest Dryas and Older Dryas stadials (cool periods) at the end of the Last glacial period. In places where the Older Dryas was not seen, it is known as the Bølling–Allerød warming. |
c.12,340 BC | c.11,140 BC | Cemetery 117: site of the world's first known battle/war. |
c.12,500 BC | c.10,800 BC | Natufian culture begins minor agriculture |
c. 12,150 BC | c. 11,140 BC | Mesolithic 2 (Natufian culture), some sources have Mesolithic 2 ending at 9500 BC |
c. 12,000 BC | c. 11,700 BC | Older Dryas stadial (cool period) |
c. 11,700 BC | c. 10,800 BC | Allerød oscillation |
c.13,000 BC | c.11,000 BC | Lake Agassiz forms from glacial meltwater. It bursts and floods out through the Mackenzie River into the Arctic Ocean at 11,000 BC, possibly causing the Younger Dryas cold period. |
c. 12,000 BC | c. 8,000 BC | Göbekli Tepe, world's earliest known temple-like structure, is created. |
c. 10,800 BC | Younger Dryas impact event is proposed to have occurred, causing the onset of the Younger Dryas. | |
c. 10,800 BC | Younger Dryas cold period begins. | |
c. 10,000 BC |
|
10th millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 9700 BC |
| |
c. 9660 to c. 9600 BC | Younger Dryas cold period ends. Pleistocene ends and Holocene begins. Large amounts of previously glaciated land become habitable again. Some sources place the Younger Dryas as stretching from 10,800 BC to 9500 BC. This cool period was possibly caused by a shutdown of the North Atlantic thermohaline circulation (Gulf Stream/Jet Stream), due to flooding from Lake Agassiz as it reformed. | |
c. 9500 BC |
| |
c. 9270 BC | Greenland sees an abrupt and rapid 4 °C rise in temperatures[5] | |
c. 9000 BC | First stone structures at Jericho built. |
9th millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 8500 BC to 7370 | Jericho is established as one of the oldest cities in the world sometime between 8500 BC and 7370 BC | |
c. 8000 BC |
|
8th millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 7900 BC | c. 7700 BC | Lake Agassiz refills from glacial melt-water around 7900 BC as Glaciers retreat north |
c. 7640 BC | Date theorized for impact of Tollmann's hypothetical bolide with Earth and associated global cataclysm. | |
c. 7500 BC |
| |
7500–7000 BC | 3500–3000 BC | Neolithic Subpluvial begins in northern Africa, Mesolithic period ends. Until about 5000 BC, the Sahara desert is substantially wetter than today, comparable to a savannah as part of the African humid period. |
7th millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 6600 BC | Jiahu symbols, carved on tortoise shells in Jiahu, Northern China | |
c. 6500 BC |
| |
c.6440±25 BC | Kurile volcano on Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula has VEI 7 eruption. It is one of the largest of the Holocene epoch | |
c. 6400 BC | Lake Agassiz drains into oceans for the final time, leaving Lakes Manitoba, Winnipeg, Winnipegosis, and Lake of the Woods, among others in the region, as its remnants. The draining may have caused the 8.2 kiloyear event, 200 years later | |
c. 6200 BC | 8.2-kiloyear event, a sudden significant cooling episode | |
c. 6100 BC | The Storegga Slide, causing a megatsunami in the Norwegian Sea | |
c. 6000 BC |
|
6th millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 5600 BC | According to the Black Sea deluge theory, the Black Sea floods with salt water. Some 3000 cubic miles (12,500 km3) of salt water is added, significantly expanding it and transforming it from a fresh-water landlocked lake into a salt water sea. | |
c. 5500 BC | Beginning of the desertification of north Africa, which ultimately leads to the formation of the Sahara desert from land that was previously savannah, though it remains wetter than today. It's possible this process pushed people in the area into migrating to the region of the Nile in the east, thereby laying the groundwork for the rise of Egyptian civilization. | |
c. 5300 BC |
| |
c. 5000 BC |
| |
5000 BC | 700 BC | Megalithic Temples of Malta were created |
5th millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 4570 BC | c. 4250 BC | Merimde culture on the Nile River |
4400 BC | 3500 BC | Amratian/Naqada I culture in Predynastic Egypt |
4000 BC | 3100 BC | Uruk period begins in Mesopotamia |
4th millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
3900 BC |
| |
3600 BC | 2800 BC |
|
3500 BC to 3000 BC | The end of the Neolithic Subpluvial era and return of extremely hot and dry conditions in the Sahara Desert, hastened by the 5.9 kiloyear event and the Piora Oscillation. | |
3500 BC | 3200 BC | Gerzeh/Naqada II culture in Egypt |
3200 BC | 3000 BC | Naqada III and Protodynastic Period of Egypt |
3100 BC | 2686 BC | Early Dynastic Period of Egypt. The hallmarks of Ancient Egypt (art, architecture, religion) all formed during this period. This is widely assumed to be the time and place of the first writing system, the Egyptian hieroglyphs (date is disputed, some claim they were used as far back as 3200 BC, while others believe they weren't invented until the 28th century BC). |
between 3000 BC and 2800 BC | 30 km/19 mi-wide Burckle Crater is formed in Indian Ocean from a possible meteor or comet impact. |
3rd millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 30th century BC |
| |
c. 2880 BC | Germination of Prometheus (a bristlecone pine of the species Pinus longaeva), formerly the world's oldest known non-clonal organism. | |
c. 2832 BC | Germination of Methuselah (a bristlecone pine of the species Pinus longaeva), currently the world's oldest known non-clonal organism. | |
2807 BC | Suggested date for an asteroid or comet impact occurring between Africa and Antarctica, around the time of a solar eclipse on May 10, based on an analysis of flood stories. Possibly causing the Burckle crater and Fenambosy Chevron.[7][8] | |
2650 BC |
| |
c. 2630 BC | 1815 BC | Construction of the Egyptian pyramids. |
2500 BC | Sahara becomes fully desiccated, and conditions become largely identical to those of today. Desiccation had been proceeding from 7500 to 6000 BC, as a result of the shift in the West African tropical monsoon belt southwards from the Sahel, and intensified by the 5.9 kiloyear event. Subsequent rates of evaporation in the region led to a drying of the Sahara, as shown by the drop in water levels in Lake Chad. Tehenu of the Sahara attempt to enter into Egypt, and there is evidence of a Nile drought in the pyramid of Unas. | |
2300 BC | Neolithic period ends in China. | |
2200 BC | Beginning of a severe centennial-scale drought in northern Africa, southwestern Asia and midcontinental North America, which very likely caused the collapse of the Old Kingdom in Egypt as well as the Akkadian Empire in Mesopotamia. This coincides with the transition from the Subboreal period to the subatlantic period. |
2nd millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 2000 BC | c. 1000 BC | Continued mountain formation in the Himalayas contributes to the drying up of the Sarasvati River and the desertification of the Thar Region. This contributes to the decline of the Harappan civilization. |
1900 BC | The Atra-Hasis Epic describes Babylonian flood, with warnings of the consequences of human overpopulation. | |
Around 1600 BC | Minoan eruption destroys much of Santorini island, but does not destroy (contrary to what was previously believed) the Minoan civilization on Crete.[9] This may have inspired the legend of Atlantis. | |
1450 BC | Minoan civilization in the Mediterranean declines, but scholars are divided on the cause. Possibly a volcanic eruption was the source of the catastrophe (see Minoan eruption). On the other hand, gradual deforestation may have led to materials shortages in manufacturing and shipping. Loss of timber and subsequent deterioration of its land was probably a factor in the decline of Minoan power in the late Bronze Age, according to John Perlin in A Forest Journey. | |
1206 BC | 1187 BC | Evidence of major droughts in the Eastern Mediterranean. Hittite and Ugarit records show requests for grain were sent to Egypt, probably during the reign of Pharaoh Merenptah. Carpenter has suggested that droughts of equal severity to those of the 1950s in Greece, would have been sufficient to cause the Late Bronze Age collapse. The cause may have been a temporary diversion of winter storms north of the Pyrenees and Alps. Central Europe experienced generally wetter conditions, while those in the Eastern Mediterranean were substantially drier. There seems to have been a general abandonment of peasant subsistence agriculture in favour of nomadic pastoralism in Central Anatolia, Syria and northern Mesopotamia, Palestine, the Sinai and NW Arabia. |
1st millennium BC
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
800 BC | 500 BC |
|
200 BC | Axial Age, a revolution in thinking that we know as Philosophy, begins in China, India, and Europe, with people such as Socrates, Plato, Homer, Laozi, Confucius, among others, alive at this time. | |
753 BC | Ancient Rome begins, with the founding of Rome. This marks the beginning of Classical antiquity. | |
771-221 BC | The Eastern Zhou period of China is characterized by the formation of larger and more powerful political systems, whose ability to transform their environment is much greater than earlier states. They establish parks to protect wildlife for hunting purposes. [10] | |
508 BC | Democracy created in Athens, Ancient Greece | |
356 BC | 323 BC | Alexander the Great |
269 BC | 232 BC | Reign of Ashoka the Great, and the beginning of propagation of Buddhism |
221 BC | The Qin dynasty founds China's first empire period of China, conquers large areas of the East Asian mainland, and soon collapses, but is soon rebuilt by the Han dynasty, whose population and environmental impact is similar to that of the Roman Empire. Qin established some of the world's first environmental protection laws. [11] | |
c. 225 BC | The Sub-Atlantic period began about 225 BC (estimated on the basis of radiocarbon dating) and has been characterized by increased rainfall, cooler and more humid climates, and the dominance of beech forests. The fauna of the Sub-Atlantic is essentially modern although severely depleted by human activities. The Sub-Atlantic is correlated with pollen zone IX; sea levels have been generally regressive during this time interval, though North America is an exception. | |
c. 200 BC | Sri Lanka becomes the first country in the world to have a nature reserve when King Devanampiya Tissa of Anuradhapura established a wildlife sanctuary. |
1st millennium AD
edit1st century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
79 AD | Mount Vesuvius erupts, burying Pompeii and Herculaneum |
2nd century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
114 | 117 | Rome reaches its greatest expanse in terms of territory, stretching from the Sahara desert, to England and Belgium, along the Danube River and Black Sea to Mesopotamia and modern-day Kuwait. |
186 | Hatepe eruption in New Zealand turns the skies red over Rome and China.[12] |
3rd century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
235 | 284 | Crisis of the Third Century affects Ancient Rome |
4th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 300 | Migration Period begins. This leads in a couple of centuries to the fall of Rome. | |
301 | San Marino founded, claims to be the world's oldest republic |
5th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 400 | c. 800 | Migration Period |
c. 450 | Malaria epidemic in Italy.[13] | |
476 | Fall of Rome, end of the Western Roman Empire |
6th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
535 | 536 | 535–536: global climate abnormalities affecting several civilizations. |
7th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
650 | Muslim conquests of the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe | |
600 | Mount Edziza volcanic complex in British Columbia, Canada erupts |
8th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
Dates unknown | Classical Maya civilization begins to decline; Beowulf saga is probably written in Europe sometime in this century | |
750 | Muslim Caliphate is moved to Baghdad, ushering in its golden age as a cultural crossroads | |
774 | 775 | Unusually-high levels of Carbon 14 are found in tree rings throughout Japan, most likely from a gamma-ray burst,[14] previously thought to be from cosmic rays or abnormally strong solar flares |
772 | 804 | Charlemagne invades what is now northwestern Germany, battling the Saxons for more than thirty years and finally crushing their rebellion, incorporating Old Saxony into Francia and the Christian world. |
9th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 850 | Severe drought exacerbated by soil erosion causes collapse of Central American city states and the end of the Classic Maya civilization. | |
874 | According to Landnámabók, the settlement of Iceland begins. |
10th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
930 | Althing, oldest parliamentary institution in the world that is still in existence, is founded | |
980s | Greenland settled by Viking colonists from Iceland |
2nd millennium
edit11th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
985 | 1080 | Norse Colony at L'Anse aux Meadows |
1006 | SN 1006 supernova, brightest apparent magnitude stellar event in recorded history (−7.5 visual magnitude) | |
1054 | SN 1054 supernova, created the Crab Nebula | |
1099 | The Hodh Ech Chargui and Hodh El Gharbi Regions of southern Mauritania become desert.[15] |
12th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
1104 | Venetian Arsenal in Venice, Italy is founded, employed 16,000 at its peak for the mass production of sailing ships in large assembly lines, hundreds of years before the Industrial Revolution | |
1150 | Renaissance of the 12th century in Europe, blast furnace for the smelting of cast iron is imported from China | |
1185 | First record of windmills in Europe | |
Dates unknown | Nan Madol is constructed on Pohnpei in Micronesia |
13th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 1250 | c. 1850 | Start of the Little Ice Age, a stadial period within our interglacial warm period |
1257 | Catastrophic eruption of Samalas in Indonesia, with climate effects comparable to that of the 1815 Tambora eruption. This contributed to the cooling seen in the Little Ice Age. | |
end of the 13th century | beginning of the Renaissance era in Italy, gradually spreads throughout Europe. |
14th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
1315 | 1317 | Great Famine of 1315–1317 (Europe) |
1347 | 1350s | Bubonic plague decimates Europe, creating the first attempts to enforce public health and quarantine laws. |
1350 | Western Settlement in Greenland abandoned, possibly due to the deteriorating climate caused by the onset of the Little Ice Age |
15th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
1408 | Last known recording (a wedding) of Norse settlers in Greenland | |
1453 | 1452/1453 mystery eruption contributes to fall of Constantinople. | |
1492 | Christopher Columbus lands in Caribbean islands, starting the Columbian exchange, causing the Aztec Empire and Inca Empire to fall to the Spanish in the next century, as well as bringing various species of animals and plants across the Atlantic Ocean. |
16th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
1585 | 1587 | Roanoke Colony, now in North Carolina |
End of the 16th century | End of the Renaissance era, gradual transition towards the Baroque, Romantic, Enlightenment, and Modern eras. |
17th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
1600 | Huaynaputina erupts in South America. The explosion had effects on climate around the Northern Hemisphere (Southern hemispheric records are less complete), where 1601 was the coldest year in six centuries, leading to a famine in Russia; see Russian famine of 1601–1603.[16] | |
1610 | It has been posited that 1610 marks the beginning of the Anthropocene, or the 'Age of Man', marking a fundamental change in the relationship between humans and the Earth system.[17][18] |
18th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
c. 1750 | Beginning of Industrial Revolution, which eventually turns to use of coal and other fossil fuels to drive steam engines and other devices. Anthropogenic carbon pollution presumably increases. | |
1755 | Great Lisbon earthquake occurred in the Kingdom of Portugal on Saturday, 1 November, the holiday of All Saints' Day, at around 09:40 local time; subsequent fires and a tsunami almost totally destroyed Lisbon and adjoining areas, accentuating political tensions in the kingdom and profoundly disrupting Portugal's colonial ambitions. | |
1770 | Failure of the monsoons in the late 1760s contribute to the Bengal famine of 1770 where 10 million people die. This forces a change in tax policy in the British Empire, which was a cause of the American War of Independence. | |
1783 | The volcano Laki erupts, emitting sufficient sulfur dioxide gas and sulphate particles to kill a majority of Iceland's livestock and cause an unusually cold winter in Europe and Western Asia. | |
1789 | 1793 | A recent study of El Niño patterns suggests that the French Revolution was caused in part by the poor crop yields of 1788–89 in Europe, resulting from an unusually strong El-Niño effect between 1789 and 1793.[19] |
1798 | Thomas Robert Malthus publishes An Essay on the Principle of Population, thus beginning Malthusian economics. |
19th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
1804 | World population reaches 1 billion. | |
1815 | Eruption of Mt. Tambora in what is now Indonesia, largest in the 2nd millennium AD. Leads to the... | |
1816 | ... "Year Without a Summer" across North America and Europe. | |
1845 | 1857 | Unusually wet weather in Northern Europe causes crop failures. The worst crop affected was the potato on which both Ireland (the Great Famine) and Scotland (the Highland Potato Famine) were heavily dependent. Elsewhere in Europe, the food shortages lead to civil unrest and the revolutions of 1848. Counting the Irish diaspora and the forty-eighters, millions of Europeans emigrate to North America, South America, and Australia. |
1859 | John Tyndall discovers that some gases block infrared radiation. He suggests that changes in the concentration of these gases could bring climate change.[20] | |
1883 | Eruption of Krakatoa in Indonesia. The sound of the explosion is heard as far as Australia and China, the altered air waves causes strange colours on the sky and the volcanic gases reduce global temperatures during the following years. A disputed but vivid sunset was captured in Edvard Munch's The Scream. | |
1896 | Svante Arrhenius mathematically quantifies the effects of carbon dioxide on climate change related to the Industrial Revolution and the burning of fossil fuels. |
20th century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
1900 | The 1900 Galveston hurricane hits Galveston, Texas and reverses the city's previously rapid growth. | |
1906 | San Francisco earthquake causes collapse of insurance markets and the Panic of 1907.[21] | |
1908 | Tunguska event decimates a remote part of Siberia. | |
1914 | 1918 | World War I, which involves heavy bombardment, explosions, and poison gas warfare. |
1918 | Spanish flu kills between 20 and 50 million people worldwide shortly after World War I. | |
1927 | World population reached 2 billion. | |
1932 | 1937 | Exceptional precipitation absence in northern hemisphere exacerbated by human activities [citation needed] causes the Dust Bowl drought of the US plains and the Soviet famine of 1932–1933 (harsh economic damage in US and widespread death in USSR). |
1939 | 1945 | World War II, with heavy bombardment, genocide, and explosions. Towards the end of the war, nuclear warfare occurs for the first and only time when Hiroshima and Nagasaki are bombed. |
post-1945 | Nuclear tests are performed by the United States, Soviet Union, India, Pakistan, China, North Korea, the United Kingdom, and France. Above-ground detonations continue until the Partial Test Ban Treaty is signed in 1963, causing fallout and spreading radiation around the explosion sites. | |
1955 | Gilbert Plass submits his seminal article "The Carbon Dioxide Theory of Climatic Change".[22] | |
1957 | Sputnik is launched, becomes first man-made object to orbit the Earth, and begins the Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union, culminating with the first man in space in 1961, and the Moon landing, humanity's first ventures to the Moon in 1969. | |
1960 | World population reached 3 billion.[23] | |
1963 | The Clean Air Act is passed in the United States, with subsequent amendments in 1970, 1977 and 1990. | |
1974 | World population reached 4 billion.[23] | |
1970s | 2010s | Deindustrialization occurs in the Midwest and then much of the United States, as manufacturing industries (and their pollution) move to China and other Asian countries. |
1980 | Mount St. Helens erupts explosively in Washington state. | |
1984 | Bhopal disaster. | |
1986 | Chernobyl meltdown and explosion, contaminating surrounding area, including Pripyat. | |
1987 | World population reached 5 billion.[23] | |
1989 | The Montreal Protocol comes into effect, phasing out chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and other substances responsible for ozone depletion. | |
1992 | The Earth Summit is held in Rio, attended by 192 nations. | |
1997 | The Kyoto Protocol is signed, committing nations to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. | |
1999 | World population reached 6 billion. |
3rd millennium
edit21st century
editYear(s) | Event(s) | |
---|---|---|
Start | End | |
2004 |
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2005 | ||
2008 |
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2010 |
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2011 |
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2012 |
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2013 |
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2015 |
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2016 |
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See also
edit- Behavioral modernity
- Chronology of the universe
- Civilization
- Cradle of civilization
- Culture
- History of life
- Formation and evolution of the Solar System
- Geologic time scale
- Global temperature record
- Graphical timeline from Big Bang to Heat Death
- Graphical timeline of the universe
- History of Earth
- Human evolution
- Human evolutionary genetics
- Human history
- Kardashev scale
- Paleoclimatology
- Paleotempestology
- Recorded history
- Snowball Earth
- Technological singularity
- Timeline of human evolution
- Timeline of the evolutionary history of life
- World history
References
edit- ^ Dolores R. Piperno; Ehud Weiss; Irene Holst; Dani Nadel (August 5, 2004). "Processing of wild cereal grains in the Upper Palaeolithic revealed by starch grain analysis" (PDF). Nature. 430 (7000): 670–3. Bibcode:2004Natur.430..670P. doi:10.1038/nature02734. PMID 15295598. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 4, 2011.
- ^ Taylor, K.C.; White, J; Severinghaus, J; Brook, E; Mayewski, P; Alley, R; Steig, E; Spencer, M; Meyerson, E; Meese, D; Lamorey, G; Grachev, A; Gow, A; Barnett, B (January 2004). "Abrupt climate change around 22 ka on the Siple Coast of Antarctica". Quaternary Science Reviews. 23 (1–2): 7–15. Bibcode:2004QSRv...23....7T. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2003.09.004.
- ^ Creosote Bush: Long-Lived Clones in the Mojave Desert, Frank C. Vasek, American Journal of Botany, Vol. 67, No. 2 (Feb, 1980), pp. 246–255
- ^ a b http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=11165 Larrea tridentata – King Clone
- ^ Kobashi, T.; Severinghaus, J.P.; Barnola, J. (30 April 2008). "4 ± 1.5 °C abrupt warming 11,270 yr ago identified from trapped air in Greenland ice". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 268 (3–4): 397–407. Bibcode:2008E&PSL.268..397K. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2008.01.032.
- ^ Science Daily: World's Oldest Living clonal tree, 9550 years old, Discovered In Sweden
- ^ Cambridge Conference Correspondence
- ^ Blakeslee, Sandra (November 14, 2006). "Ancient Crash, Epic Wave". The New York Times.
- ^ Jeremy B. Rutter, JoAnn Gonzalez-Major. "Akrotiri on Thera, the Santorini Volcano and the Middle and Late Cycladic Periods in the Central Aegean Islands". Dartmouth College. Retrieved 2017-11-03.
- ^ Lander, Brian (2021). The King's Harvest: A Political Ecology of China from the First Farmers to the First Empire. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- ^ Lander, Brian (2021). The King's Harvest: A Political Ecology of China from the First Farmers to the First Empire. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- ^ Wilson, C. J. N.; Ambraseys, N. N; Bradley, J; Walker, G. P. L. (1980). "A new date for the Taupo eruption, New Zealand". Nature. 288 (5788): 252–253. Bibcode:1980Natur.288..252W. doi:10.1038/288252a0.
- ^ "BBC – History – Ancient History in depth: Malaria and the Fall of Rome".
- ^ "Space Explosion to Blame for Tree Ring Mystery, Astronomers Say".
- ^ "Mauritania".
- ^ "The volcano that changed the world". Nature. 11 April 2008. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
- ^ "Anthropocene: New dates proposed for the 'Age of Man'". BBC. 11 March 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
- ^ "Defining the Anthropocene". Nature. 11 March 2015. doi:10.1038/nature14258.
- ^ Richard H. Grove, “Global Impact of the 1789–93 El Niño,” Nature393 (1998), 318–319.
- ^ "The Discovery of Global Warming". American Institute of Physics. February 2013. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
- ^ Kerry A. Odell and Marc D. Weidenmier, Real Shock, Monetary Aftershock: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and the Panic of 1907, The Journal of Economic History, 2005, vol. 64, issue 04, p. 1002-1027.
- ^ Plass, Gilbert N. (May 1956). "The Carbon Dioxide Theory of Climate Change". Tellus. 8 (2): 140–54. Bibcode:1956TellA...8..140P. doi:10.1111/j.2153-3490.1956.tb01206.x.
- ^ a b c "United Nations Population Fund moves Day of 6 Billion based on new population estimates". Population Connection. 1998-10-28. Archived from the original on 2006-02-20. Retrieved 2006-03-11.
- ^ "COP21 climate change summit reaches deal in Paris". BBC. 12 December 2015. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
- ^ "Climate change: 'Monumental' deal to cut HFCs, fastest growing greenhouse gases". BBC News. 15 October 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2016.