Holocene calendar
The Holocene calendar, also known as the Holocene Era (HE) is a year numbering system that adds exactly 10,000 years to the currently world-dominant AD or CE era system, placing its first year near the beginning of the Holocene epoch and the Neolithic revolution, making the current year 12016 HE. It was first proposed by the scientist Cesare Emiliani in 1993.[1][2][3]
Motivation
Cesare Emiliani's proposal for a calendar reform sought to solve a number of alleged problems with the current Anno Domini era, which number the years of the commonly accepted world calendar. These issues include:
- The Anno Domini era is based on an erroneous estimation of the birth year of Jesus. The era places Jesus' "birth" year in 1 BC, but modern scholars have determined that he was born in or before 4 BC. Emiliani argues that replacing it with the approximate beginning of the Holocene era makes sense.
- The "birth" of Jesus is a less universally relevant epoch event than the approximate beginning of the Holocene era.
- The years BC are counted down when moving from past to future, making calculation of time spans difficult.
- The Anno Domini era has no year zero, with 1 BC followed immediately by AD 1, complicating the calculation of timespans further.
Instead, HE places its epoch to 10,000 BC. This is a rough approximation of the start of the current geologic epoch, 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 within this time.
Shifts in estimation of onset
Scientists have improved their understanding of and can now more accurately date the beginning of the Holocene. A consensus viewpoint has solidified and was formally adopted by the IUGS in 2013. Currently estimates places its start at 11.7ka B2K. This conflicts with the dating proposed for HE and means that it is not clear how it would be altered from the 1993 proposal in Nature. In the twenty-odd years after 1993 it has mostly been a curiosity and has not gained widespread use even within the geological, palaeontological or archaeological scientific communities.
Benefits
Human Era proponents claim that it makes for easier geological, archaeological, dendrochronological and historical dating, as well as that it bases its epoch on an event more universally relevant than the birth of Jesus. All key dates in human history can then be listed using a simple increasing date scale with smaller dates always occurring before larger dates. Another gain is that the Holocene Era starts before the other Calendar Eras. So it could be useful for the comparison and conversion of dates from different calendars.
Conversion
Conversion from Julian or Gregorian AD years to the Human Era can be achieved by adding 10,000 to the AD year. The current year of AD 2016 can be transformed into a Holocene year by adding the digit "1" before it, making it 12016 HE. BC years are converted by subtracting the BC year from 10,001. A useful validity check is that the last single digits of BC and HE equivalent pairs must add up to 1 or 11.
Gregorian years | ISO 8601 | Human Era Holocene Epoch |
Event |
---|---|---|---|
30001 BC | -30000 | 20000 BHE | Pleistocene |
10001 BC | -10000 | 0 HE | The approximate beginning of the Holocene |
10000 BC | -9999 | 1 HE | |
9000 BC | -8999 | 1001 HE | Jericho, the earliest known walled city |
8000 BC | -7999 | 2001 HE | Start of After the Development of Agriculture (A.D.A.) |
6000 BC | -5999 | 4001 HE | First copper found in the Middle East. The Copper Age begins |
4713 BC | -4712 | 5288 HE | The start of the Julian date (JD) at January 1, Greenwich noon, Julian proleptic calendar |
3761 BC | -3760 | 6240 HE | Beginning of Anno Mundi in the Jewish calendar |
3085 BC | -3084 | 6916 HE | Pharaoh Narmer (a.k.a. Menes) unifies Egypt |
3000 BC | -2999 | 7001 HE | Beginning of Indus Valley Civilization |
2720 BC | -2719 | 7281 HE | The reign of Pharaoh Djoser. The construction of the Pyramid of Djoser, the first Egyptian pyramid |
2700 BC | -2699 | 7301 HE | |
1792 BC | -1791 | 8209 HE | The birth of Hammurabi |
1379 BC | -1378 | 8622 HE | The reign of the Pharaoh Akhenaten begins |
1000 BC | -0999 | 9001 HE | |
776 BC | -0775 | 9225 HE | The beginning of the first Olympiad |
753 BC | -0752 | 9248 HE | The legendary Founding of Rome. The beginning of ab urbe condita |
551 BC | -0550 | 9450 HE | The birth of Confucius |
544 BC | -0543 | 9457 HE | The legendary death of Siddhartha Gautama. The start of the Buddhist Era |
535 BC | -0534 | 9466 HE | The beginning of the Sungai Batu civilization, Malaysia |
323 BC | -0322 | 9678 HE | Death of Alexander the Great in Babylon |
221 BC | -0220 | 9780 HE | The founding of Imperial China by the Qin dynasty |
218 BC | -0217 | 9783 HE | Hannibal's invasion |
100 BC | -0099 | 9901 HE | |
45 BC | -0044 | 9956 HE | The introduction of the Julian calendar |
44 BC | -0043 | 9957 HE | The Assassination of Julius Caesar on the Ides of March |
27 BC | -0026 | 9974 HE | The beginning of the Principate with Augustus Caesar |
5 BC | -0004 | 9996 HE | A possible date of the Birth of Jesus |
2 BC | -0001 | 9999 HE | |
1 BC | +0000 | 10000 HE | Year Zero at ISO 8601 |
1 AD | +0001 | 10001 HE | The beginning of the Vulgar Era Anno Salutis |
2 AD | +0002 | 10002 HE | |
14 AD | +0014 | 10014 HE | The death of Augustus |
30 AD | +0030 | 10030 HE | The possible date of the crucifixion of Jesus |
476 AD | +0476 | 10476 HE | Fall of Rome |
535 AD | +0535 | 10535 HE | Extreme weather events of 535–536 |
536 AD | +0536 | 10536 HE | |
622 AD | +0622 | 10622 HE | The migration of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina (Hijrah), Begin of the Islamic calendar |
632 AD | +0632 | 10632 HE | Death of Muhammad. Muslim conquests begin |
800 AD | +0800 | 10800 HE | The Coronation of Charlemagne |
1066 AD | +1066 | 11066 HE | Norman Invasion |
1096 AD | +1096 | 11096 HE | The beginning of the First Crusade |
1340 AD | +1347 | 11347 HE | The Black Death decimates Asia and Europe |
1353 AD | +1353 | 11353 HE | |
1453 AD | +1453 | 11453 HE | The Fall of Constantinople |
1492 AD | +1492 | 11492 HE | The Voyages of Christopher Columbus |
1502 AD | +1502 | 11502 HE | |
1582 AD | +1582 | 11582 HE | The introduction of the Gregorian calendar |
1639 AD | +1639 | 11639 HE | Wars of the Three Kingdoms |
1651 AD | +1651 | 11651 HE | |
1688 AD | +1688 | 11688 HE | The Glorious Revolution |
1707 AD | +1707 | 11707 HE | Acts of Union 1707. The foundation of the Kingdom of Great Britain |
1776 AD | +1776 | 11776 HE | United States Declaration of Independence |
1775 AD | +1775 | 11775 HE | American Revolutionary War |
1783 AD | +1783 | 11783 HE | |
1789 AD | +1789 | 11789 HE | Storming of the Bastille and beginning of the French Revolution |
1800 AD | +1800 | 11800 HE | The foundation of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland with the Acts of Union 1800 |
1804 AD | +1804 | 11804 HE | The Coronation of Napoleon I |
1815 AD | +1815 | 11815 HE | Battle of Waterloo |
1816 AD | +1816 | 11816 HE | Year Without a Summer |
1861 AD | +1861 | 11861 HE | American Civil War |
1865 AD | +1865 | 11865 HE | |
1912 AD | +1912 | 11912 HE | Sinking of the RMS Titanic; Xinhai Revolution in China. Beginning of the Minguo calendar. |
1914 AD | +1914 | 11914 HE | World War I |
1918 AD | +1918 | 11918 HE | |
1917 AD | +1917 | 11917 HE | The February and the October Revolution in Russia |
1922 AD | +1922 | 11922 HE | The foundation of the Irish Free State and the current United Kingdom. Independence of the Kingdom of Egypt. |
1937 AD | +1937 | 11937 HE | Transformation of the Irish Free State into the Republic of Ireland |
1939 AD | +1939 | 11939 HE | World War II |
1945 AD | +1945 | 11945 HE | |
1950 AD | +1950 | 11950 HE | Commencement date of Before Present |
1962 AD | +1962 | 11962 HE | Cuban Missile Crisis |
1969 AD | +1969 | 11969 HE | First manned Moon landing |
1993 AD | +1993 | 11993 HE | Publication of the Holocene calendar by Cesare Emiliani |
2016 AD | +2016 | 12016 HE | Current Year |
10000 AD | +10000 | 20000 HE |
References
- ↑ Cesare Emiliani, "Calendar Reform", Nature 366 (1993) 716.
- ↑ The Holocene Calendar at Meerkat Meade.
- ↑ Human Era Calendar by Harry Weseman.
- David Ewing Duncan (1999). The Calendar. pp. 331–332. ISBN 1-85702-979-8.
- Duncan Steel (2000). Marking Time: The Epic Quest to Invent the Perfect Calendar. John Wiley and Sons. pp. 149–151. ISBN 978-0-471-29827-4.
- Günther A. Wagner (1998). Age Determination of Young Rocks and Artifacts: Physical and Chemical Clocks in Quaternary Geology and Archeology. Springer. p. 48. ISBN 978-3-540-63436-2.
External links
- "News and comment", Geology Today, 20/3 (2004) 89–96.
- Timeline of World History
- Geologic TimeScale Foundation: GSSP Table, engineering.purdue.edu
- Comparison of some historic dates in the gregorian and the Holocene calendar
- Article about the Holocene calendar