Anthropogenic

views updated Jun 08 2018

Anthropogenic

Refers to changes in the natural world due to the activities of people. Such changes may be positive or negative. For example, anthropogenic changes in soils can occur due to plowing, fertilizing, using the soil for construction, or long continued manure additions. When manure is added to soils, the change is considered beneficial, but when soils are compacted for use as parking lots, the change is considered negative. Other examples of anthropogenic effects on the environment include oil spills , acid rain , logging of old-growth forests, creation of wetlands , preservation of endangered species , among others.

anthropogenic

views updated May 17 2018

anthropogenic Strictly, pertaining to anthropogeny, which is the study of human origins (anthropogenesis, first used in 1839, from the Greek anthropos, meaning ‘human being’, and gen-, ‘be produced’) More recently the term has acquired a wider, secondary meaning, applied to substances, processes, etc. of human origin or resulting from human activity.

anthropogenic

views updated May 08 2018

anthropogenic Applied to substances, processes, etc. of human origin, or that result from human activity.