Dictionary Definition
recent adj
1 being new in a time not long past; "recent
graduates"; "a recent addition to the house"; "recent buds on the
apple trees"
2 of the immediate past or just previous to the
present time; "a late development"; "their late quarrel"; "his
recent trip to Africa"; "in recent months"; "a recent issue of the
journal" [syn: late(a)]
3 near to or not long before the present; "recent
times"; "of recent origin"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
recent (: more recent, : most recent)Translations
- Afrikaans: vars
- Albanian: vonë
- Arabic: (’axīr), (jadīd)
- Azeri: təzə
- Bosnian: nov
- Bulgarian: неотдавнашен (neotdavnašen)
- Catalan: fresc
- Chinese: 最近 (zuì jìn)
- Croatian: nedavni
- Czech: nedávný
- Danish: frisk
- Dutch: recent
- Esperanto: lasta
- Estonian: hiljutine
- Faeroese: feskur
- Finnish: tuore
- French: récent
- West Frisian: farsk
- Georgian: ახალი (axali)
- German: jüngst, neu
- Greek: πρόσφατος (prósphatos)
- Hebrew: טָרִי (tarí)
- Hungarian: nem régi
- Indonesian: baru saja
- Irish: deireanach
- Italian: recente
- Japanese: 最近 (さいきん, saikin)
- Korean: 최근 (chwigeun)
- Latvian: nesens
- Limburgish: recènte
- Lithuanian: naujas
- Mongolian: саяхан (sajahan)
- Norwegian: nylig
- Papiamentu: fresku
- Persian: (tāza)
- Polish: świeży
- Portuguese: recente
- Punjabi: hul
- Romanian: recent
- Russian: недавний (nedávnij)
- Serbian: недавни (nedavni)
- Slovak: nedávny
- Spanish: reciente
- Sranan: fersi
- Swedish: ny
- Tagalog: kararaan
- Telugu: ఇటీవలి (iteevali)
- Thai: (reo-reo née)
- Turkish: yeni
- Ukrainian: останній (ostánnij)
- Uyghur: débaya
- Vietnamese: gần đây
- Welsh: diweddar
- Yiddish: frish
- Yucatec: aak'
Extensive Definition
The Holocene is a geological epoch,
which began approximately 11,550 calendar years BP (about
9600 BC). According to traditional geological thinking, the
Holocene continues to the present. However, recently there have
been papers that propose that the Holocene ended about 300 BP (1700
AD) with the start of the Anthropocene .
The Holocene is part of the Neogene and
Quaternary
periods. Its name comes from the Greek words (holos, whole or
entire) and (kainos, new), meaning "entirely recent". It has been
identified with MIS
1 and can be considered an interglacial in the current
ice
age.
Overview
It is generally accepted that the Holocene started 10 ka (thousand years) before present (11,703 calendar years before 1950). The period precedes the Weichsel glacial. The Holocene can be subdivided into five chronozones based on climatic fluctuations:- Preboreal (10 ka - 9 ka),
- Boreal (9 ka - 8 ka),
- Atlantic (8 ka - 5 ka),
- Subboreal (5 ka - 2.5 ka) and
- Subatlantic (2.5 ka - present).
Human civilization dates entirely within the
Holocene. The Blytt-Sernander
classification of climatic periods defined, initially, by plant
remains in peat mosses, is now of purely historical interest. The
scheme was defined for north Europe, but the climate changes have
been claimed to occur more widely. The periods of the scheme
include a few of the final, pre-Holocene, oscillations of the last
glacial period and then classify climates of more recent
prehistory.
Paleontologists have defined no faunal
stages for Holocene. If subdivision is necessary, periods of
human technological development such as the Mesolithic,
Neolithic, and
Bronze
Age are usually used. However, the time periods referenced by
these terms varies with the emergence of those technologies in
different parts of the world.
Climatically, the Holocene may be divided evenly
into the Hypsithermal
and Neoglacial
periods; the boundary coincides with the start of the Bronze Age in
western civilisation. According to some scholars, a third division,
the Anthropocene, began in the 18th Century . It is debatable
whether this is an age within, or follows, the Holocene epoch.
Geology
Continental motions are less than a kilometre over a span of only 10 ka. However, ice melt caused world sea levels to rise about 35 m (110 ft) in the early part of the Holocene. In addition, many areas above about 40 degrees north latitude had been depressed by the weight of the Pleistocene glaciers and rose as much as 180 m (600 ft) over the late Pleistocene and Holocene, and are still rising today.The sea level rise and temporary land depression
allowed temporary marine incursions into areas that are now far
from the sea. Holocene marine fossils are known from Vermont, Quebec, Ontario, and
Michigan.
Other than higher latitude temporary marine incursions associated
with glacial depression, Holocene fossils are found primarily in
lakebed, floodplain, and cave deposits. Holocene marine deposits
along low-latitude coastlines are rare because the rise in sea
levels during the period exceeds any likely upthrusting of
non-glacial origin.
Post-glacial
rebound in the Scandinavia
region resulted in the formation of the Baltic Sea.
The region continues to rise, still causing weak earthquakes across Northern
Europe. The equivalent event in North America was the rebound
of Hudson
Bay, as it shrank from its larger, immediate post-glacial
Tyrrell
Sea phase, to near its present boundaries.
Climate
Although geographic shifts in the Holocene were minor, climatic shifts were very large. Ice core records show that before the Holocene there were global warming and cooling periods, but climate changes became more regional at the start of the Younger Dryas. However, the Huelmo/Mascardi Cold Reversal in the Southern Hemisphere began before the Younger Dryas, and the maximum warmth flowed south to north from 11,000 to 7,000 years ago. It appears that this was influenced by the residual glacial ice remaining in the Northern Hemisphere until the latter date.The hypsithermal
was a period of warming in which the global climate became 0.5–2°C
warmer than today. However, the warming was probably not uniform
across the world. This period ended about 5,500 years ago, when the
earliest human civilizations in Asia and Africa were
flourishing. This period of warmth ended with the descent into the
Neoglacial. At that time, the climate was not unlike today's, but
there was a slightly warmer period from the 10th–14th centuries
known as the Medieval
Warm Period. This was followed by the Little Ice
Age, from the 13th or 14th century to the mid 19th century,
which was a period of significant cooling, though not everywhere as
severe as previous times during neoglaciation.
The Holocene warming is an interglacial period
and there is no reason to believe that it represents a permanent
end to the current
ice age. However, the current global
warming may result in the Earth becoming warmer than the
Eemian
Interglacial, which peaked at roughly 125,000 years ago and was
warmer than the Holocene. This prediction is sometimes referred to
as a super-interglacial.
Compared to glacial conditions, habitable zones
have expanded northwards, reaching their northernmost point during
the hypsithermal. Greater moisture in the polar regions has caused
the disappearance of steppe-tundra.
Ecological developments
Animal and plant life have not evolved much
during the relatively short Holocene, but there have been major
shifts in the distributions of plants and animals. A number of
large animals including mammoths and mastodons, saber-toothed
cats like Smilodon and
Homotherium,
and giant
sloths disappeared in the late Pleistocene and early
Holocene—especially in North America, where animals that
survived elsewhere (including horses and camels) became extinct.
This extinction of American megafauna has been explained
as caused by the arrival of the ancestors of Amerindians;
though most scholars assert that climatic change also
contributed.
Throughout the world, ecosystems in cooler
climates that were previously regional have been isolated in higher
altitude ecological "islands."
The 8.2 ka
event, an abrupt cold spell recorded as a negative excursion in
the record lasting 400 years, is the most prominent climatic event
occurring in the Holocene epoch, and may have marked a resurgence
of ice cover. It is thought that this event was caused by the final
drainage of Lake Agassiz
which had been confined by the glaciers, disrupting the thermohaline circulation of
the Atlantic
http://www.eos.ubc.ca/research/glaciology/research/Publications/ClarkeLeveringtonTellerDyke(QSR-2004).pdf.
Human developments
The beginning of the Holocene corresponds with the beginning of the Mesolithic age in most of Europe; but in regions such as the Middle East and Anatolia with a very early neolithisation, Epipaleolithic is preferred in place of Mesolithic. Cultures in this period include: Hamburgian, Federmesser, and the Natufian culture.Both are followed by the aceramic Neolithic
(Pre-Pottery
Neolithic A and Pre-Pottery
Neolithic B) and the pottery Neolithic.
Impact events
Within the Holocene numerous meteorite events have been recently discovered in Europe, as well as in seas such as the Indian Ocean and near remote Siberia. It has been speculated that an impact effect such as that represented today by the Burckle crater or the Chiemgau Impact crater could have dramatically affected human culture in its early history by the creation of megatsunamis, perhaps inspiring deluge or inundation stories such as that of Noah's Flood. A washout effect from such waves may have breached land bridges with sudden massive erosion, along with violent weather changes. Competing reasons for the various basin floods also include climate change and earthquake fault lines weakening the barriers to ocean encroachment.Further reading
- Neil Roberts The Holocene: an environmental history (Blackwell Publishing)
- Mackay, A.W., Battarbee, R.W., Birks, H.J.B. & Oldfield, F. (2003) Editors. Global change in the Holocene. Publisher: Arnold, London. 528 pp (29 chapters)
See also
References
- Ogg, Jim; June, 2004, Overview of Global Boundary Stratotype Sections and Points (GSSP's) http://www.stratigraphy.org/gssp.htm Accessed April 30, 2006
External links
recent in Asturian: Holocenu
recent in Breton: Holosen
recent in Catalan: Holocè
recent in Czech: Holocén
recent in Danish: Holocæn
recent in German: Holozän
recent in Estonian: Holotseen
recent in Spanish: Holoceno
recent in Esperanto: Holoceno
recent in Basque: Holozeno
recent in Persian: هولوسین
recent in French: Holocène
recent in Korean: 홀로세
recent in Croatian: Holocen
recent in Indonesian: Holosen
recent in Icelandic: Nútími (jarðfræði)
recent in Italian: Olocene
recent in Hebrew: הולוקן
recent in Luxembourgish: Holozän
recent in Lithuanian: Holocenas
recent in Hungarian: Holocén
recent in Macedonian: Холоцен
recent in Dutch: Holoceen
recent in Japanese: 完新世
recent in Norwegian: Holocen
recent in Norwegian Nynorsk: Holocen
recent in Occitan (post 1500): Olocèn
recent in Low German: Holozän
recent in Polish: Holocen
recent in Portuguese: Holoceno
recent in Romanian: Holocen
recent in Russian: Голоцен
recent in Slovak: Holocén
recent in Slovenian: Holocen
recent in Serbo-Croatian: Holocen
recent in Finnish: Holoseeni
recent in Swedish: Holocen
recent in Vietnamese: Thế Holocen
recent in Ukrainian: Голоцен
recent in Vlaams: Holoceen
recent in Chinese: 全新世
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ancient, brand-new, current, early, erstwhile, fore, former, fresh, immemorial, just out,
late, later, latest, latter, modern, modernistic, neoteric, new, new-fashioned, newfangled, newly come,
novel, of yesterday,
old, olden, once, onetime, past, prehistoric, previous, primeval, primitive, prior, quondam, sometime, then