Jump to content

Holocene calendar: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Jclerman (talk | contribs)
Emiliani DEFINED his proposed calendar as ANCHORED in 10,000 BC
Line 1: Line 1:
{{redirect3|H.E.|For other uses of H.E., see [[He (disambiguation)]]}}{{redirect3|Holocene era|For the geological epoch, see [[Holocene Epoch]]}}
{{redirect3|H.E.|For other uses of H.E., see [[He (disambiguation)]]}}{{redirect3|Holocene era|For the geological epoch, see [[Holocene Epoch]]}}
The '''Holocene calendar''', popular term for the '''''Holocene Era''' count'' or '''''Human Era''' count'', uses a dating system similar to [[astronomical year numbering]] but adds 10,000, placing a zero at the start of the ''Human Era'' (HE, the beginning of human [[civilization]]) the approximation of the [[Holocene|Holocene Epoch]] (HE, post [[Ice Age]]) for easier [[geological]], [[archaeological]], [[dendrochronological]] and [[historical]] dating. The current [[Gregorian Calendar|Gregorian]] year can be transformed by simply placing a 1 before it (ie: {{ #expr: {{{year|<noinclude>{{CURRENTYEAR}}</noinclude><includeonly>{{PAGENAME}}</includeonly>}}}+10000 }}). The ''Human Era'' proposal was first made by [[Cesare Emiliani]] in 1993 (11993 HE). [http://www.readersadvice.com/mmeade/house/holocene.html] [http://weseman.com/page.php?form=human_era_calendar]
The '''Holocene calendar''', popular term for the '''''Holocene Era''' count'' or '''''Human Era''' count'', uses a dating system similar to [[astronomical year numbering]] but adds 10,000, placing a zero at the start of the ''Human Era'' (HE, the beginning of human [[civilization]]) the approximation of the [[Holocene|Holocene Epoch]] (HE, post [[Ice Age]]) for easier [[geological]], [[archaeological]], [[dendrochronological]] and [[historical]] dating. The current [[Gregorian Calendar|Gregorian]] year can be transformed by simply placing a 1 before it (ie: {{ #expr: {{{year|<noinclude>{{CURRENTYEAR}}</noinclude><includeonly>{{PAGENAME}}</includeonly>}}}+10000 }}). The ''Human Era'' proposal was first made by [[Cesare Emiliani]] in 1993 (11993 HE). [http://www.readersadvice.com/mmeade/house/holocene.html] [http://weseman.com/page.php?form=human_era_calendar]

The Holocene is a geological epoch which began approximately 10,000 years ago (about 8000 BC).


==Western motivation==
==Western motivation==
Line 24: Line 22:
|-
|-
| End of the [[Paleolithic]] Period,<br>All continents (apart from [[Antarctica]]) inhabited,<br>[[Neolithic Revolution|Agriculture]] and the domestication of animals begins,<br>Alteration in the [[Earth's magnetic field]] occurs,<br>Possible extinction of [[Homo floresiensis|last of humanity's hominan relatives]]
| End of the [[Paleolithic]] Period,<br>All continents (apart from [[Antarctica]]) inhabited,<br>[[Neolithic Revolution|Agriculture]] and the domestication of animals begins,<br>Alteration in the [[Earth's magnetic field]] occurs,<br>Possible extinction of [[Homo floresiensis|last of humanity's hominan relatives]]
| c. 8001 BC
| c. 10001 BC
| c. 0 HE
| c. 0 HE
|-
|-
| Earliest [[PPNA Wall of Jericho|walled city]] ([[Jericho]])
| Earliest [[PPNA Wall of Jericho|walled city]] ([[Jericho]])
| c. 7001 BC
| c. 9001 BC
| c. 1000 HE
| c. 1000 HE
|-
|-
| First copper found in [[Middle East]] - beginning of [[Copper Age]]
| First copper found in [[Middle East]] - beginning of [[Copper Age]]
| c. 4001 BC
| c. 6001 BC
| c. 4000 HE
| c. 4000 HE
|-
|-
| Possible creation of the [[Egyptian calendar]]
| Possible creation of the [[Egyptian calendar]]
| 4242 BC
| 4242 BC
| c. 2600 HE
| 5759 HE
|-
|-
| Beginning of [[Indus Valley Civilization]]
| Beginning of [[Indus Valley Civilization]]
Line 45: Line 43:
| Probable date of the completion of the [[Pyramid of Djoser|first Egyptian pyramid]]
| Probable date of the completion of the [[Pyramid of Djoser|first Egyptian pyramid]]
| 2611 BC
| 2611 BC
| c. 4400 HE
| 7390 HE
|-
|-
| Beginning of [[Xia Dynasty]] in [[China]]
| Beginning of [[Xia Dynasty]] in [[China]]
Line 53: Line 51:
| Foundation of [[Rome]]
| Foundation of [[Rome]]
| 753 BC
| 753 BC
| c. 7300 HE
| 9248 HE
|-
|-
| First [[Maya civilization#Writing system|Central American writing systems]]
| First [[Maya civilization#Writing system|Central American writing systems]]
| c. 400 BC
| c. 400 BC
| c. 7600 HE
| c. 9601 HE
|-
|-
| Empire of [[Ashoka the Great|Asoka]]
| Empire of [[Ashoka the Great|Asoka]]
| 273 BC
| 273 BC
| c. 7800 HE
| 9728 HE
|-
|-
| Imperial China, [[Qin dynasty]]
| Imperial China, [[Qin dynasty]]
Line 69: Line 67:
| Last year of BC era
| Last year of BC era
| 1 BC
| 1 BC
| 8000 HE
| 10000 HE
|-
|-
| First year of anno Domini era
| First year of anno Domini era
| AD 1
| AD 1
| 8001 HE
| 10001 HE
|-
|-
| [[Migration Period]] begins, leading to the [[Fall of Rome]]
| [[Migration Period]] begins, leading to the [[Fall of Rome]]
| AD 300/476
| AD 300/476
| 8300/8476 HE
| 10300/10476 HE
|-
|-
| [[Turkic migration]]s begin
| [[Turkic migration]]s begin
| c. AD 500
| c. AD 500
| c. 8500 HE
| c. 10500 HE
|-
|-
| [[Muslim conquests]] begin
| [[Muslim conquests]] begin
| AD 632
| AD 632
| 8632 HE
| 10632 HE
|-
|-
| [[Great Zimbabwe]] built
| [[Great Zimbabwe]] built
| c. AD 1000
| c. AD 1000
| c. 9000 HE
| c. 11000 HE
|-
|-
| [[Hindu-Arabic numerals]] introduced to [[Europe]]
| [[Hindu-Arabic numerals]] introduced to [[Europe]]
| AD 1202
| AD 1202
| 9202 HE
| 11202 HE
|-
|-
| [[Black Death]] decimates Asia and Europe
| [[Black Death]] decimates Asia and Europe
| AD 1340s
| AD 1340s
| 9340s HE
| 11340s HE
|-
|-
| [[Age of Discovery|European expansion and colonization]] begins
| [[Age of Discovery|European expansion and colonization]] begins
| AD 1419
| AD 1419
| 9419 HE
| 11419 HE
|-
|-
| Fall of the [[Inca Empire]]
| Fall of the [[Inca Empire]]
| AD 1572
| AD 1572
| 9572 HE
| 11572 HE
|-
|-
| [[Second Industrial Revolution]]
| [[Second Industrial Revolution]]
| c. AD 1850
| c. AD 1850
| c. 9850 HE
| c. 11850 HE
|-
|-
| [[Second World War]] and [[nuclear technology|nuclear fission]]
| [[Second World War]] and [[nuclear technology|nuclear fission]]
| AD 1939-1945
| AD 1939-1945
| 9939-9945 HE
| 11939-11945 HE
|-
|-
| [[Human spaceflight|First human in space]]
| [[Human spaceflight|First human in space]]
| AD 1961
| AD 1961
| 9961 HE
| 11961 HE
|-
|-
| Current year
| Current year
| AD {{CURRENTYEAR}}
| AD {{CURRENTYEAR}}
| {{#expr:{{{year|<noinclude>{{CURRENTYEAR}}</noinclude><includeonly>{{PAGENAME}}</includeonly>}}}+8000 }} HE
| {{#expr:{{{year|<noinclude>{{CURRENTYEAR}}</noinclude><includeonly>{{PAGENAME}}</includeonly>}}}+10000 }} HE
|-
|-
| Last year of the current [[millennium]]
| Last year of the current [[millennium]]
| AD 3000
| AD 3000
| 11000 HE
| 13000 HE
|}
|}



Revision as of 06:43, 20 November 2008

The Holocene calendar, popular term for the Holocene Era count or Human Era count, uses a dating system similar to astronomical year numbering but adds 10,000, placing a zero at the start of the Human Era (HE, the beginning of human civilization) the approximation of the Holocene Epoch (HE, post Ice Age) for easier geological, archaeological, dendrochronological and historical dating. The current Gregorian year can be transformed by simply placing a 1 before it (ie: 12024). The Human Era proposal was first made by Cesare Emiliani in 1993 (11993 HE). [1] [2]

Western motivation

Cesare Emiliani's proposal for a calendar reform sought to solve a number of problems with the current Gregorian Calendar, which currently serves as the commonly accepted world calendar. The issues include:

  • The Gregorian Calendar starts at the presumed year of the birth of Jesus Christ. This Christian aspect of the Gregorian calendar (especially the use of Before Christ and Anno Domini) can be irritating, or even offensive, to non-Christian people. [3]
  • Biblical scholarship is virtually unanimous that the birth of Jesus Christ would actually have been a few years prior to AD 1. This makes the calendar inaccurate insofar as Christian dates are concerned.
  • There is no year zero as 1 BC is followed immediately by AD 1.
  • BC years are counted down when moving from past to future, thus 44 BC is after 250 BC. This makes calculating date ranges in the Holocene era across the BC/AD boundary more complicated than in the HE.

Instead, HE sets the start, the epoch, of the current era to 10,000 BC. This is a first approximation of the start of the current geologic epoch, not coincidentally called the Holocene (the name means entirely recent). The motivation for this is that human civilization (e.g., the first settlements, agriculture, etc.) is believed to have arisen entirely within this time. All key dates in human history can then be listed using a simple increasing date scale with smaller dates always occurring before larger dates.

Gregorian conversion

Conversion to Holocene from Gregorian AD dates can be achieved by adding 10,000. BC dates are converted by subtracting the BC year from 10,001.

A useful validity check is that the last digit of BC and HE equivalents must add up to 1 or 11.

Events Gregorian years Holocene Era
Human Era
End of the Paleolithic Period,
All continents (apart from Antarctica) inhabited,
Agriculture and the domestication of animals begins,
Alteration in the Earth's magnetic field occurs,
Possible extinction of last of humanity's hominan relatives
c. 10001 BC c. 0 HE
Earliest walled city (Jericho) c. 9001 BC c. 1000 HE
First copper found in Middle East - beginning of Copper Age c. 6001 BC c. 4000 HE
Possible creation of the Egyptian calendar 4242 BC 5759 HE
Beginning of Indus Valley Civilization c. 3000 BC c. 7001 HE
Probable date of the completion of the first Egyptian pyramid 2611 BC 7390 HE
Beginning of Xia Dynasty in China 2100 BC 7901 HE
Foundation of Rome 753 BC 9248 HE
First Central American writing systems c. 400 BC c. 9601 HE
Empire of Asoka 273 BC 9728 HE
Imperial China, Qin dynasty 221 BC 9780 HE
Last year of BC era 1 BC 10000 HE
First year of anno Domini era AD 1 10001 HE
Migration Period begins, leading to the Fall of Rome AD 300/476 10300/10476 HE
Turkic migrations begin c. AD 500 c. 10500 HE
Muslim conquests begin AD 632 10632 HE
Great Zimbabwe built c. AD 1000 c. 11000 HE
Hindu-Arabic numerals introduced to Europe AD 1202 11202 HE
Black Death decimates Asia and Europe AD 1340s 11340s HE
European expansion and colonization begins AD 1419 11419 HE
Fall of the Inca Empire AD 1572 11572 HE
Second Industrial Revolution c. AD 1850 c. 11850 HE
Second World War and nuclear fission AD 1939-1945 11939-11945 HE
First human in space AD 1961 11961 HE
Current year AD 2024 12024 HE
Last year of the current millennium AD 3000 13000 HE

References

  • David Ewing Duncan (1999). The Calendar. pp. 331–332. ISBN 1-85702-979-8.
  • Cesare Emiliani (1993). Calendar reform. Nature. pp. 366:716.
  • Duncan Steel (2000). Marking Time: The Epic Quest to Invent the Perfect Calendar. pp. pp.149-151. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  • Günther A. Wagner (1998). Age Determination of Young Rocks and Artifacts: Physical and Chemical Clocks in Quaternary Geology and Archeology. Springer. pp. p48. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  • Timeline of World History
  • "News and comment", Geology Today, 20/3 (2004) 89–96.

See also