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The Piacenzian is in the international geologic time scale the upper stage or latest age of the . It spans the time between 3.6 ± 0.005 Ma and 2.58 Ma (million years ago). The Piacenzian is after the and is followed by the (part of the ).

The Piacenzian is roughly with the European land mammal age MN 16, overlaps the late and early South American land mammal age and falls inside the more extensive North American land mammal age. It also correlates with the Astian, Redonian, and Romanian regional stages of Europe, and the Waipipian and Mangapanian stages of New Zealand. Some authorities describe the British Red Crag Formation and Waltonian Stage as late Piacenzian, while others regard them as early Pleistocene.

(2025). 9780199653065, Oxford University Press.

Carbon dioxide levels during the Piacenzian were similar to those of today, making this age, with global mean temperature 2–3 °C higher and sea levels about twenty meters higher than today, an important analogue for predictions of the future of our world.


Definition
The Piacenzian was introduced in scientific literature by stratigrapher Karl Mayer-Eymar in 1858. It is named after the city of .

The base of the Piacenzian is at the base of the Gauss chronozone and at the of the Globorotalia margaritae and Pulleniatina primalis. The for the Piacenzian Stage is at Punta Piccola on , Italy.

The top of the Piacenzian (the base of the Quaternary System and the Pleistocene Series) is defined magnetostratigraphically as the base of the Matuyama (C2r) (at the Gauss-Matuyama reversal), and isotopic stage 103. Above this point there are notable extinctions of the calcareous nannofossils: and Discoaster surculus.Gradstein et al. (2005), p. 28; Rio et al. (1998)


Climate
The Piacenzian was the last age before the Quaternary glaciations started to take hold in the Northern hemisphere. The of Antarctica was also less prominent than today and sea levels were approximately twenty meters higher than the present. The global mean temperature was 2–3 °C warmer than the pre-industrial temperature. During the Mid-Piacenzian Warm Period the concentration of carbon dioxide peaked at approximately 389 ppm (in the range 381–427 ppm with 95% confidence), thus similar to the concentration during the 2010s. The Piacenzian can therefore be used as an analogue to the future climate and sea level to expect if the carbon dioxide concentration stabilizes at this level. In particular, the KM5c interglacial during the Mid-Piacenzian Warm Period occurred during an orbital configuration close to the current situation, with similar geographical distribution of .

Climate of the Piacenzian would have started as a somewhat wet and warm period in North America occurring just after a brief cooling period of the Zanclean. Deposition of sediments and mollusks of the Piacenzian correspond with the rise in sea level creating the Tamiami Subsea and Jackson Subsea of Florida, Duplin Subsea generally of , and Yorktown Subsea of the and inland . Dates have been established on the basis of the genera and species of mollusks found.Petuch, Edward J., Ph.D. Florida Atlantic University, Department of Geodsciences. Cenozoic Seas: The View From Eastern North America. CRC Press, Dec. 29, 2003. .


Origin of the genus Homo
The late Piacenzian may be when the genus developed out of the ancestral genus . While the oldest known fossils unambiguously identified as date to just after the end of the Piacenzian (2.58 Ma), a fossilized jawbone that exhibits traits that are transitional between Australopithecus and Homo habilis was discovered in the in 2015. The find was made by Ethiopian student Chalachew Seyoum at a site called between the and rivers, in (near ). Based on geological evidence from the Afar region, the individual would have lived just after a major climate shift, during which forests and waterways were rapidly replaced by arid . Regarding the Afar region, and as stated in the journal Science: "Vertebrate fossils record a faunal turnover indicative of more open and probable arid habitats than those reconstructed earlier in this region, in broad agreement with hypotheses addressing the role of environmental forcing in hominin evolution at this time." This interpretation is consistent with hypotheses that emphasize the savanna as the ancestral environment which shaped the evolution of early Homo and other hominins.


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