Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

People have shaped most of terrestrial nature for at least 12,000 years

Erle C. Ellis; Nicolas Gauthier; Kees Klein Goldewijk; Rebecca Bliege Bird; Nicole Boivin; Sandra Dı́az; Dorian Q. Fuller; Jacquelyn L. Gill; Jed O. Kaplan; Naomi Kingston; Harvey Locke; Crystal N. H. McMichael; Darren Ranco; Torben C. Rick; M. Rebecca Shaw; Lucas Stephens; Jens‐Christian Svenning; James Watson

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2021

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Summary

Archaeological and paleoecological evidence shows that by 10,000 BCE, all human societies employed varying degrees of ecologically transformative land use practices, including burning, hunting, species propagation, domestication, cultivation, and others that have left long-term legacies across the terrestrial biosphere. Yet, a lingering paradigm among natural scientists, conservationists, and policymakers is that human transformation of terrestrial nature is mostly recent and inherently destructive. Here, we use the most up-to-date, spatially explicit global reconstruction of historical human populations and land use to show that this paradigm is likely wrong. Even 12,000 y ago, nearly three quarters of Earth's land was inhabited and therefore shaped by human societies, including more than

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1073/pnas.2023483118
Catalogue ID
NRmo9rin9c-0sy
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