Human Era

The Human Era, also known as the Holocene calendar or Holocene era (HE), is a year numbering system that adds exactly 10,000 years to the currently world-dominant Anno Domini (AD) and Common Era (CE) system, placing its first year near the beginning of the Holocene epoch and the Neolithic revolution. Human Era proponents claim that it makes for easier geological, archaeological, dendrochronological and historical dating, as well as that it bases its epoch on a more universally relevant event. The current year of 2012 AD can be transformed into a Holocene year by adding the digit "1" before it, making it 12012 HE. The Human Era was first proposed by scientist, Cesare Emiliani in 1993 (11993 HE).[1][2][3]

Contents

Motivation

Cesare Emiliani's proposal for a calendar reform sought to solve a number of claimed problems with the current Anno Domini era, which number the years of the commonly accepted world calendar. These issues include:

Instead, HE places its epoch or year one of the current era 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 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.

Conversion

Conversion to the Human Era from Julian or Gregorian AD years can be achieved by adding 10,000. 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 Human Era
Holocene Epoch
ISO 8601
30001 BC 20000 BHE -30000
10001 BC 0 HE -10000
10000 BC 1 HE -9999
2 BC 9999 HE -0001
1 BC 10000 HE +0000
AD 1 10001 HE +0001
AD 2 10002 HE +0002
AD 2012 12012 HE +2012
AD 10000 20000 HE +10000

See also

References

  1. ^ Cesare Emiliani, "Calendar Reform", Nature 366 (1993) 716.
  2. ^ The Holocene Calendar at Meerkat Meade.
  3. ^ Human Era Calendar by Harry Weseman.