Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristics

<p>The global assemblage of human-created buildings, infrastructure, machinery, and other artifacts has been called the “technosphere”, and it plays a major role in the present-day dynamics of the Earth system. The technosphere enables the rapid extraction of natural resources and the combust...

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Main Authors: E. D. Galbraith, A. A. Faisal, T. Matitia, W. Fajzel, I. Hatton, H. Haberl, F. Krausmann, D. Wiedenhofer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2025-07-01
Series:Earth System Dynamics
Online Access:https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/16/979/2025/esd-16-979-2025.pdf
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author E. D. Galbraith
E. D. Galbraith
E. D. Galbraith
A. A. Faisal
T. Matitia
W. Fajzel
I. Hatton
H. Haberl
F. Krausmann
D. Wiedenhofer
author_facet E. D. Galbraith
E. D. Galbraith
E. D. Galbraith
A. A. Faisal
T. Matitia
W. Fajzel
I. Hatton
H. Haberl
F. Krausmann
D. Wiedenhofer
author_sort E. D. Galbraith
collection DOAJ
description <p>The global assemblage of human-created buildings, infrastructure, machinery, and other artifacts has been called the “technosphere”, and it plays a major role in the present-day dynamics of the Earth system. The technosphere enables the rapid extraction of natural resources and the combustion of fossil fuels, impacting biodiversity and causing climate change while generating copious amounts of waste materials. At the same time, the technosphere supports humans in many ways, including the provision of food, shelter, transportation, and long-distance communication, and it is the main component of material wealth. Despite its importance, Earth system science has been slow to explicitly incorporate the technosphere as an integrated part of its conceptual and quantitative frameworks. Here we propose a refined definition of the technosphere, intended to assist in developing functional integration with other Earth system spheres as well as social sciences. We also suggest a categorization system for the things that make up the technosphere based on how their end uses support human motivations. Given the formal definition and resolved categorization, we delineate basic attributes of the technosphere, including its mass distribution among categories and across the Earth surface, and discuss its first-order temporal dynamics. In particular, of the 1-trillion-tonne technosphere mass, we estimate that roughly one-half is buildings and one-third transportation infrastructure, both of which we map globally at 1° resolution. Movable entities, mostly composed of vehicles, vessels, and machinery, account for less than 2 % of the total technosphere mass yet are comparable to the biomass of all animals on Earth. We show that reconstructions of the technosphere since 1900 are consistent with an autocatalytic process, resulting in exponential growth with a long-run increase of <span class="inline-formula">&gt;</span> 3 % yr<span class="inline-formula"><sup>−1</sup></span>, equivalent to a 20-year doubling time. Building a stronger quantitative understanding of the technosphere can help to better integrate it within Earth system science while bridging natural and social sciences to support physically plausible pathways towards sustainability and human wellbeing.</p>
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spelling doaj-art-bfd7edb6b8fa4fbea83d51f91a7aa3532025-08-20T03:17:04ZengCopernicus PublicationsEarth System Dynamics2190-49792190-49872025-07-011697999910.5194/esd-16-979-2025Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristicsE. D. Galbraith0E. D. Galbraith1E. D. Galbraith2A. A. Faisal3T. Matitia4W. Fajzel5I. Hatton6H. Haberl7F. Krausmann8D. Wiedenhofer9Earth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, CanadaInstitut de Ciència i Tecnología Ambientals (ICTA-UAB), Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193, Cerdanyola del Vallès, SpainICREA, Pg. Lluís Companys 23, 08010, Barcelona, SpainEarth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, CanadaEarth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, CanadaEarth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, CanadaEarth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, CanadaInstitute of Social Ecology, BOKU University, Vienna, AustriaInstitute of Social Ecology, BOKU University, Vienna, AustriaInstitute of Social Ecology, BOKU University, Vienna, Austria<p>The global assemblage of human-created buildings, infrastructure, machinery, and other artifacts has been called the “technosphere”, and it plays a major role in the present-day dynamics of the Earth system. The technosphere enables the rapid extraction of natural resources and the combustion of fossil fuels, impacting biodiversity and causing climate change while generating copious amounts of waste materials. At the same time, the technosphere supports humans in many ways, including the provision of food, shelter, transportation, and long-distance communication, and it is the main component of material wealth. Despite its importance, Earth system science has been slow to explicitly incorporate the technosphere as an integrated part of its conceptual and quantitative frameworks. Here we propose a refined definition of the technosphere, intended to assist in developing functional integration with other Earth system spheres as well as social sciences. We also suggest a categorization system for the things that make up the technosphere based on how their end uses support human motivations. Given the formal definition and resolved categorization, we delineate basic attributes of the technosphere, including its mass distribution among categories and across the Earth surface, and discuss its first-order temporal dynamics. In particular, of the 1-trillion-tonne technosphere mass, we estimate that roughly one-half is buildings and one-third transportation infrastructure, both of which we map globally at 1° resolution. Movable entities, mostly composed of vehicles, vessels, and machinery, account for less than 2 % of the total technosphere mass yet are comparable to the biomass of all animals on Earth. We show that reconstructions of the technosphere since 1900 are consistent with an autocatalytic process, resulting in exponential growth with a long-run increase of <span class="inline-formula">&gt;</span> 3 % yr<span class="inline-formula"><sup>−1</sup></span>, equivalent to a 20-year doubling time. Building a stronger quantitative understanding of the technosphere can help to better integrate it within Earth system science while bridging natural and social sciences to support physically plausible pathways towards sustainability and human wellbeing.</p>https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/16/979/2025/esd-16-979-2025.pdf
spellingShingle E. D. Galbraith
E. D. Galbraith
E. D. Galbraith
A. A. Faisal
T. Matitia
W. Fajzel
I. Hatton
H. Haberl
F. Krausmann
D. Wiedenhofer
Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristics
Earth System Dynamics
title Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristics
title_full Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristics
title_fullStr Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristics
title_full_unstemmed Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristics
title_short Delineating the technosphere: definition, categorization, and characteristics
title_sort delineating the technosphere definition categorization and characteristics
url https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/16/979/2025/esd-16-979-2025.pdf
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