© 2018 EQUINOX PUBLISHING LTD
Journal of Contemporary Archaeology 5.1 (2018) 44–52
ISSN (print) 2051-3429 (online) 2051-3437 https://doi.org/10.1558/jca.33380
44 Research Article
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The Technofossil:
A Memento Mori
n
Ben Dibley
Western Sydney University, Australia
B.Dibley@westernsydney.edu.au
Abstract
In the process of formally identifying a geological interval, it is crucial for stratigraphers
to fnd the point at which strata reveal a signifcant, dramatic shift in the types of fossils
and other geological markers being found. In the nomenclature of the discipline this
point constitutes a “golden spike”. For the geologists advancing the proposition that the
Anthropocene might be formalized as the Earth’s latest interval on the geologic time scale,
this spike will be registered by the sudden appearance of a new sedimentary layer – one
decisively marked by the presence of “technofossils”. From the proliferation of deep
perforations of the strata by mining to the wide distribution of rare elements (aluminum,
titanium, uranium) and novel compounds (plastics), for the geologists advocating the
notion of the Anthropocene, the deposits of human technology buried in the Earth’s crust
will not only be that species’ geological legacy, but the mineral markers of its emergence
as a major geo-force. No doubt the logos of the technofossil is important for geologists
making the case for the Anthropocene’s formalization as a geological interval; its pathos,
however, is of equal import in building a public for it. In the hands of the Anthropocene’s
stratigraphers the prospective mineralization of human activity is also the species’ antici-
pated memorialization: literally written in stone, the strata of the Anthropocene will be
a memorial to human existence – to the era of its doing and undoing. In this, then, the
technofossil is as much a memento mori as it is a heuristic for imagining a world after the
human – a “world without us”. It is this conjuncture that this paper explores.
Keywords: Anthropocene; memento mori; technofossils