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The Pyrocene: How Humanity Created a Fire Age

October 28, 2020 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

 Lynn W. Day Distinguished Lectureship in Forest and Conservation History

2020 LECTURE

“The Pyrocene: How Humanity Created a Fire Age”

by Stephen J. Pyne

REGISTRATION

Acclaimed fire historian and author Dr. Stephen J. Pyne will deliver the 2020 Lynn W. Day Distinguished Lectureship in Forest and Conservation History on October 28, 2020. In his talk “The Pyrocene: How Humanity Created a Fire Age,” he will be discussing how we are living in a Fire Age of comparable scale to the Ice Ages of the Pleistocene, and whether our relationship with fire is a mutual assistance pact or a Faustian bargain. The one-hour presentation will be given via Zoom at 2 pm EDT and requires registration to receive viewing information. You can register for the event by clicking the “Registration” button above.

Writes Dr. Pyne, “The Earth is a uniquely fire planet, humans a uniquely fire creature, and how they have interacted has been shaping our world throughout the Holocene. First through the control over ignition, and then by adding some control over living biomass, people have been reshaping biogeography and even climate. The process went on afterburners when humanity’s quest for more firepower led to the burning of fossil biomass. This pyric transition has passed over every environment that humans inhabit. It upset fire regimes in living landscapes, leading to fire crises. Its impact on the atmosphere has globalized that effect, quickening a fire epoch. We are creating a fire age, the Pyrocene, the fire-informed equivalent to an ice age.”

Dr. Stephen Pyne is an emeritus professor at Arizona State University. He has published 35 books, most of them dealing with fire, but others on Antarctica, the Grand Canyon, and the Voyager mission. His fire histories include surveys of America, Australia, Canada, Europe (including Russia), and the Earth. He’s the author of the FHS Issues Series book America’s Fires: A Historical Context for Policy and Practice and a frequent contributor to Forest History Today. He recently completed “To the Last Smoke,” a ten-volume survey of fire in the United States published by the University of Arizona Press.

Details

Date:
October 28, 2020
Time:
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

Venue

Via webinar