In 2009, the Anthropocene Working Group of the Sub-commission on Quaternary Stratigraphy began debating on a candidate for the Anthropocene
Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP), where the area had to preserve, in good condition, changes of human impacts on the environment. Geochemical analysis of sediment cores has allowed for the reconstruction of the environmental history (e.g. human impact, pollution) of the area. This analysis has revealed the trends and sources of air pollution over approximately 150 years. The well-distinguished stratigraphy led to the lake becoming a candidate for determining the start date of the proposed
Anthropocene epoch, with a base date at 1950 CE. Crawford Lake was chosen in July 2023 to represent the "key site that shows we're in a new climate epoch". The lake has been described as the
"golden spike" showing the global human impact on earth. The first age of the Anthropocene could be named the
Crawfordian, after the lake. ==References==