pyric transition
PIR-ik tran-ZIH-shun
Stephen Pyne's term for the moment an industrializing society shifts from burning living landscapes to burning fossil fuels. The open flame vanishes from field and hearth, replaced by combustion in engines and furnaces. The fire doesn't stop โ it goes underground. The immediate effect is a population explosion of fires as old and new practices overlap; the long-term effect is fire famine, as open burning is suppressed below replacement.
Etymology
Greek pyr (fire) + Latin transitio (a going across). The crossing-over of fire.
Notes
Coined by Stephen J. Pyne.
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