Human influence on the global climate system has intensified dramatically since the Industrial Revolution (around 1750) . With the rapid expansion of industry, fossil fuel consumption, and large-scale land-use change, human activities have altered the Earth's energy balance , atmospheric composition, and natural climate processes. In environmental science and climatology, this process is described using key concepts such as anthropogenic climate change, greenhouse gas emissions, radiative forcing, and the Anthropocene . Today, more than half of all industrial carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions have occurred since 1970 , highlighting the rapid acceleration of human impact. These emissions, primarily from fossil fuel combustion, deforestation, and industrial agriculture , have increased global average temperatures by approximately 1.1–1.2°C since the pre-industrial period (1850–1900) . The period 2015–2024 is recorded as the warmest decade in modern climate observations 1. Industrial Re...
Human activities have progressively transformed the natural environment. In early human history, environmental impacts were localized and relatively minor , but with the development of agriculture, industrial technology, and modern economic systems, these impacts have intensified into global-scale environmental change . In environmental geography and ecology, this transformation is described using concepts such as anthropogenic change, environmental degradation, ecological footprint, industrialization, and the Anthropocene . 1. Pre-Agricultural Era (Before ~10,000 BCE) Key Concept: Low Anthropogenic Pressure Before the development of agriculture, humans lived as hunter–gatherers , relying directly on natural ecosystems for survival. Population density was extremely low, and technology was simple. Environmental Characteristics Human interaction with nature was largely adaptive rather than transformative . Resource use followed natural ecological cycles such as seasonal migration and wi...