The Extraordinary Mediocrity of the Holocene

The extinction of multiple genera of large-bodied mammals during the Holocene interglacial transition has been attributed to three hypothesized causes: human migration, climate change, and an extra-terrestrial impact. Two of these hypotheses, climate change and extra-terrestrial impactor, would pred...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Drake, Lee
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: EarthArXiv 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/fgc27
https://eartharxiv.org/fgc27/
Description
Summary:The extinction of multiple genera of large-bodied mammals during the Holocene interglacial transition has been attributed to three hypothesized causes: human migration, climate change, and an extra-terrestrial impact. Two of these hypotheses, climate change and extra-terrestrial impactor, would predict that the Holocene interglacial transition was uniquely stressful for large-bodied mammals. To test the severity of the Holocene interglacial transition relative to other warming events, ice cores from Antarctica were analyzed using Bayesian change-point analysis and modeling. Most features of the Holocene could be predicted by a loess model of previous interglacials with a span of 0.015. The Younger Dryas, a punctuated return to cold temperatures, also had precedent in previous interglacials and interstadials. The Holocene lacks any extreme in either temperature anomaly or temperature change, and fails to provide any evidence for extreme climatic changes that would have been uniquely stressful to Earth’s biota.