We evaluate the boundary of the Anthropocene geological time interval as an epoch, since it is useful to
have a consistent temporal definition for this increasingly used unit, whether the presently informal
term is eventually formalized or not. Of the three main levels suggested e an ‘early Anthropocene’ level
some thousands of years ago; the beginning of the Industrial Revolution at ~1800 CE (Common Era); and
the ‘Great Acceleration’ of the mid-twentieth century - current evidence suggests that the last of these
has the most pronounced and globally synchronous signal. A boundary at this time need not have a
Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP or ‘golden spike’) but can be defined by a Global
Standard Stratigraphic Age (GSSA), i.e. a point in time of the human calendar.We propose an appropriate
boundary level here to be the time of the world's first nuclear bomb explosion, on July 16th 1945 at
Alamogordo, New Mexico; additional bombs were detonated at the average rate of one every 9.6 days
until 1988 with attendant worldwide fallout easily identifiable in the chemostratigraphic record. Hence,
Anthropocene deposits would be those that may include the globally distributed primary artificial radionuclide signal, while also being recognized using a wide range of other stratigraphic criteria. This suggestion for the Holocene-Anthropocene boundary may ultimately be superseded, as the Anthropocene is only in its early phases, but it should remain practical and effective for use by at least the current generation of scientists.