The Japan Times - To track human impact on Earth, scientists probe Crawford Lake

EUR -
AED 4.232402
AFN 72.605135
ALL 95.706558
AMD 435.177963
ANG 2.062997
AOA 1056.804427
ARS 1603.618324
AUD 1.65557
AWG 2.077307
AZN 1.961597
BAM 1.95077
BBD 2.324606
BDT 141.624843
BGN 1.969908
BHD 0.435258
BIF 3416.39138
BMD 1.152459
BND 1.476094
BOB 7.975333
BRL 6.158091
BSD 1.154224
BTN 107.90279
BWP 15.738898
BYN 3.501695
BYR 22588.187959
BZD 2.321315
CAD 1.583305
CDF 2621.843157
CHF 0.911981
CLF 0.027088
CLP 1069.589781
CNY 7.936286
CNH 7.966405
COP 4260.1092
CRC 539.109991
CUC 1.152459
CUP 30.540152
CVE 109.98143
CZK 24.533526
DJF 205.530073
DKK 7.471942
DOP 68.513349
DZD 152.623121
EGP 60.197142
ERN 17.286879
ETB 181.899523
FJD 2.566755
FKP 0.863792
GBP 0.866148
GEL 3.128882
GGP 0.863792
GHS 12.58156
GIP 0.863792
GMD 84.702925
GNF 10116.915147
GTQ 8.841204
GYD 241.474254
HKD 9.021578
HNL 30.55076
HRK 7.529019
HTG 151.419589
HUF 394.161555
IDR 19583.728468
ILS 3.618257
IMP 0.863792
INR 108.26023
IQD 1512.001545
IRR 1516203.305264
ISK 143.803546
JEP 0.863792
JMD 181.335602
JOD 0.817081
JPY 183.766402
KES 149.356508
KGS 100.780082
KHR 4612.108414
KMF 492.099875
KPW 1037.217292
KRW 1743.629507
KWD 0.353563
KYD 0.96182
KZT 554.899281
LAK 24784.881075
LBP 103366.389324
LKR 360.048548
LRD 211.215415
LSL 19.47033
LTL 3.402911
LVL 0.69711
LYD 7.388949
MAD 10.785152
MDL 20.100001
MGA 4812.737286
MKD 61.570546
MMK 2419.531945
MNT 4110.76234
MOP 9.316479
MRU 46.201876
MUR 53.67017
MVR 17.817413
MWK 2001.500236
MXN 20.76932
MYR 4.540115
MZN 73.641731
NAD 19.470498
NGN 1570.755077
NIO 42.470497
NOK 11.143238
NPR 172.643369
NZD 1.989414
OMR 0.443096
PAB 1.154209
PEN 3.990411
PGK 4.982154
PHP 69.481575
PKR 322.260089
PLN 4.284921
PYG 7538.563017
QAR 4.220618
RON 5.096631
RSD 117.502393
RUB 94.692921
RWF 1679.399082
SAR 4.327407
SBD 9.279205
SCR 16.048454
SDG 692.627514
SEK 10.871545
SGD 1.480137
SHP 0.864642
SLE 28.321615
SLL 24166.492445
SOS 659.610746
SRD 43.202787
STD 23853.56558
STN 24.436993
SVC 10.098961
SYP 127.420483
SZL 19.477457
THB 37.970631
TJS 11.085917
TMT 4.04513
TND 3.408811
TOP 2.774843
TRY 51.089066
TTD 7.830742
TWD 36.992194
TZS 2990.629888
UAH 50.564363
UGX 4362.751341
USD 1.152459
UYU 46.509075
UZS 14071.718318
VES 524.012113
VND 30356.911174
VUV 137.403135
WST 3.143667
XAF 654.281394
XAG 0.018012
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.114577
XCG 2.080119
XDR 0.813727
XOF 654.270069
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.978746
ZAR 19.805113
ZMK 10373.512186
ZMW 22.535895
ZWL 371.091189
  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • RYCEF

    -1.2600

    15.34

    -8.21%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

To track human impact on Earth, scientists probe Crawford Lake
To track human impact on Earth, scientists probe Crawford Lake / Photo: Peter POWER - AFP

To track human impact on Earth, scientists probe Crawford Lake

On first glance, it looks like just another small lake in Canada, one of thousands across the vast country. But the view under the surface of Crawford Lake outside Toronto tells a very different story.

Text size:

Scientists believe the lake's exceptionally well-preserved sediment layers serve as a reference point for a proposed new geological chapter in the planet's history, defined by the considerable changes wrought by human activity: the Anthropocene.

For years, geologists have tried to find the Anthropocene's so-called "golden spike" -- the spot on Earth with the best evidence of this global transformation.

And Crawford Lake -- located in Ontario province, in the greater Toronto area, is that place, according to the International Commission on Stratigraphy's Anthropocene Working Group, which revealed its decision on Tuesday.

Local legend has it that the lake is bottomless. But in fact, it's the exact opposite -- its depths hold unparalleled riches, a phenomenon that put the lake on the short list to be the "spike" years ago.

The pristinely preserved sediments show better than anywhere else on Earth that humans have irrevocably changed the planet at all levels, including its physical composition.

"It's very deep, but it's not very large. So that means that the waters don't mix all the way to the bottom," explains Francine McCarthy, a professor at Brock University who has led the research into Crawford Lake.

"And so the sediments that accumulate in the lake are not disturbed," she told AFP in April, when samples were taken for the ICS's Anthropocene working group.

- 'Distinct fingerprint' -

For centuries, Crawford Lake has been slowly absorbing signs of change. Everything that once floated on the water's surface is now embedded in some form in its sediments.

The first humans to leave their mark on the lake were Iroquois villagers who built homes along its shores. The sediments then showed the mounting influence of European settlers on the landscape, as trees vanished and new species emerged.

Then in the 20th century, fly ash from the use of coal and other fossil fuels settled in the lake, as cities developed and become more industrialized. Heavy metals such as copper and lead also appear progressively in the layers.

"We can see local disturbance. Or we can look at regional effects (like) pollution, said Paul Hamilton, a researcher at the Canadian Museum of Nature.

The lake's sediments can also document global change, he said, such as atmospheric deposition of chemicals.

For McCarthy, the other sites in contention to be the Anthropocene's "golden spike" did not have "such a distinct fingerprint of exactly what the core looks like and what each year looks like."

"Each year has its own personality, like people," she said.

- 'Everything changed' -

Extracting samples from Crawford Lake that can serve as markers for a new geological period requires skill, precision and speed.

Tim Patterson, a researcher at Carleton University in Canada, and his team are specialists. To recover the sediments from the depths of Crawford Lake without damaging them, they fill huge metal tubes with dry ice and alcohol.

The tubes -- about two meters (6.5 feet) long and 15 centimeters wide -- are then plunged into the lake's bed for 30 minutes, so that the sediments can freeze onto them, forming a series of distinct lines for each year, like the rings of a tree.

In April, what interested Patterson the most was traces of plutonium.

The start of the Anthropocene has been set in 1950 "to pick up something that was utterly unique in the history of the world. It was this nuclear testing in the air," he explained.

"Humans had never done that before. And that leaves a record, not just regionally but all around the world."

McCarthy, who has been working at Crawford Lake for nearly four decades, says 1950 also marks when humankind entered into a seemingly endless cycle of consumption, production and pollution.

"So for 12,000 years, it was happening the same way. And then suddenly, very suddenly, within a few years, everything changed," she told AFP.

But McCarthy nevertheless remains hopeful for the future.

"If geologists, who after all are the people who found the plutonium in the rocks and the petroleum in the rocks, if they accept that there is a fundamental change that's due to humans, then maybe action will be taken," she said.

M.Sugiyama--JT