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Carbon Footprints - Anthropocene Towel

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About Kitchen Towels

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Style: Kitchen Towel 16" x 24"

Brighten up any kitchen with new kitchen towels! Made of durable poly-blend, these towels are great for drying and will look vibrant with your text, monogram, or artwork. Designed for a lifetime of use, these machine washable kitchen towels look great and clean up well, too!

  • Dimensions: 16" x 24"
  • 80% durable woven polyester/ 20% polyamide blend microfiber
  • White-colored back-side is non-customizable
  • Machine washable
  • Imported, printed in the USA
Designer Tip: To ensure the highest quality print, please note that this product’s customizable design area measures 16" x 24". For best results please add 5/7" bleed.

About This Design

Carbon Footprints - Anthropocene Towel

Carbon Footprints - Anthropocene Towel

Features the cover art for double platinum album "Anthropocene" by the mythical rock group The Carbon Footprints. It portrays a dystopian future of burning, abandoned cities, rusting automobiles, oil and nuclear waste drums; polluted skies and water, and denuded landscapes resulting from humanity's disregard for the environment. The album includes the hit songs "Meltdown," "Extinction Event" and "Drill, Baby, Drill." Add your own additional text. As early as 1873, the Italian geologist Antonio Stoppani acknowledged the increasing power and effect of humanity on the Earth's systems and referred to an "anthropozoic era'." Anthropocene is a term proposed by Nobel Prize-winning scientist Paul Crutzen, to describe a geological epoch of human dominance of biological, chemical and geological processes on Earth. The term, like other time period designations (Pleistocene) has Greek roots: anthropo meaning "human" and cene meaning "new." The designation Anthropocene" would serve to mark the evidence and extent of human activities that have had a significant global impact on the Earth's ecosystems. Crutzen regards the influence of human behavior on the Earth's atmosphere in recent centuries as so significant as to constitute a new geological epoch. To date, the term has not been adopted as part of the official nomenclature of the geological field of study. In 2008 a proposal was presented to the Stratigraphy Commission of the Geological Society of London to make the Anthropocene a formal unit of geological epoch divisions. A large majority of that Stratigraphy Commission decided the proposal had merit and should therefore be examined further. Steps are being taken by independent working groups of scientists from various geological societies to determine whether the Anthropocene will be formally accepted into the Geological Time Scale. Many species have gone extinct due to human impact. Most experts agree that human beings have accelerated the rate of species extinction, although the exact rate is controversial, perhaps 100 to 1000 times the normal background rate of extinction. In 2010 a study published in Nature found that "marine phytoplankton — the vast range of tiny algae species accounting for roughly half of Earth's total photosynthetic biomass - have declined substantially in the world's oceans over the past century. Since 1950 alone, algal biomass decreased by around 40%, probably in response to ocean warming - and the decline has gathered pace in recent years. Some authors have postulated that without human impacts the biodiversity of this planet would continue to grow at an exponential rate. The implications being that climate change is accelerating due to, or exacerbated by, human activities. One suspected geological symptom resulting from human activity is increasing leves of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere. During glacial-interglacial cycles of the past million years, natural processes have varied CO2 by approximately 100 parts per million (ppm) (from 180 ppm to 280 ppm). At the onset of the Industrial Age atmospheric concentration of CO2 was approximately 280 ppm. Recently CO2 levels monitored at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii reached 400 ppm. This signal in the Earth's climate system is especially significant because it is occurring much faster, and to an enormously greater extent, than previous, similar changes. Most of this increase is due to the burning of fossil fuels. Smaller fractions are the result of cement production and land-use changes such as deforestation. The Anthropocene has no precise start date, but based on atmospheric evidence may be considered to start with the Industrial Revolution (late eighteenth century). Other scientists link the new term to earlier events, such as the rise of agriculture and the Neolithic Revolution (around 12,000 years ago). Evidence of relative human impact such as the growing human influence on land use, ecosystems, biodiversity, and species extinction is controversial; some scientists believe the human impact has significantly changed (or halted) the growth of biodiversity. Those arguing for earlier dates posit that the proposed Anthropocene may have begun as early as 14,000 to 15,000 years ago, based on lithospheric evidence; this has led other scientists to suggest that the Anthropocene began many thousand years ago; this would be closely synchronous with the current term, Holocene.

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars rating1.2K Total Reviews
1008 total 5-star reviews118 total 4-star reviews37 total 3-star reviews13 total 2-star reviews16 total 1-star reviews
1,192 Reviews
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5 out of 5 stars rating
By Corinne D.February 7, 2018Verified Purchase
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My photos don’t do the colors of my gorgeous kitchen towel justice. It’s absolutely beautiful! The printing is gorgeous!
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By Donald M.February 3, 2019Verified Purchase
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Ecstatic, Eccentric, Eclectic - Excellent, absorbent kitchen towels with vibrant designs. Excellent! Rich pure colors.
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By R.August 25, 2015Verified Purchase
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I didn't really know how the quality would be of this towel but after receiving it, i realized it reminded me of my very highest quality car towels, microfiber type. I just bought a new Mercedes AMG GT with suede seating that I don't want to even sit on without some sort of cover. I laid these towels on each seat...i bought two. :)lol! My German car now has two matching German imaged towels. The color and print is stunning...beyond high quality. Love them but they're really just too pretty to use for hand towels which is what i had bought them for originally! ...lol Thanks! Rich and colorful, beyond stunning color and print quality.

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anthropoceneclimate changeglobal warmingenvironmentconservationearthearth daynatureclimateweather

Other Info

Product ID: 197785134297938602
Created on: 5/21/2015, 8:28 AM
Rating: G