About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia or other free sources online. Pages: 101. Chapters: 10th millennium BC, 1st millennium, 1st millennium BC, 2nd millennium, 2nd millennium BC, 3rd millennium, 3rd millennium BC, 4th millennium BC, 5th millennium BC, 6th millennium BC, Holocene calendar, 10th century, 1st century, 2nd century, 3rd century, 4th century, 5th century, 6th century, 7th century, 8th century, 9th century, 10th century BC, 1st century BC, 2nd century BC, 3rd century BC, 4th century BC, 5th century BC, 6th century BC, 7th century BC, 8th century BC, 9th century BC, 11th century, 12th century, 13th century, 14th century, 15th century, 16th century, 17th century, 18th century, 19th century, 20th century, 11th century BC, 12th century BC, 13th century BC, 14th century BC, 15th century BC, 16th century BC, 17th century BC, 18th century BC, 19th century BC, 20th century BC, 2010s, 2030s, 2050s, 2060s, 2070s, 2080s, 2090s, 2100s, 21st century, 22nd century, 21st century BC, 22nd century BC, 23rd century BC, 24th century BC, 25th century BC, 26th century BC, 27th century BC, 28th century BC, 29th century BC, 30th century BC, 31st century BC, 32nd century BC, 33rd century BC, 34th century BC, 35th century BC, 36th century BC, 38th century BC, 39th century BC, 40th century BC, 2nd millennium, 3rd millennium. Excerpt: The Holocene calendar, popular term for the Holocene Era count or Human Era count, uses a dating system similar to astronomical year numbering but adds 10,000, placing a zero at the start of the Human Era (HE, the beginning of human civilization) the approximation of the Holocene Epoch (HE, post Ice Age) for easier geological, archaeological, dendrochronological and historical dating. The current Gregorian year can be transformed by simply placing a 1 before it (ie: 12011). The Human Era proposal was first made by Cesare Emiliani in 11993 HE. Cesare Emiliani's proposal for a calendar reform sought to solve a number of problems with the current...