0 Richter, Daniel deB. 2007 HUMANITY’S TRANSFORMATION OF EARTH’S SOIL: PEDOLOGY'S NEW FRONTIER Soil Science 172 12 957-967 2007 Pedology was born in the 18th and 19th centuries, when soil was first conceived as a natural body worthy of its own scientific investigation. For well over a century, pedology explored soil as a system developed from a complex of natural processes. By the mid-20th century, however, human activities began to affect substantial global soil changes with influence on the dynamics of the Earthâs environment. Such anthropedogenesis was first defined as âmetapedogenesisâ by Yaalon and Yaron (1966), a definition that we propose here to be as important to the development of pedology as the natural-body concept of soil first articulated by Dokuchaev and Hilgard more than a century ago. In this paper, we distinguish between humanityâs contemporary and historic influences on soil, as it is increasingly important for ecosystem analysis and management to distinguish contemporary changes that are overlain on those from the past. Although our understanding of global soil change is strikingly elementary, it is fundamental to establishing greater management control over Earthâs rapidly changing ecosystems. Humanityâs transformation of Earthâs soil challenges scientists to develop a pedology with broad purview and decadesâ time scale, a pedology that supports the science and management of the environment, ecosystems, and global change. In press.