Significance
In the context of the Anthropocene, identifying the precise moment at which the consequences of fundamental human-induced changes in the Earth system first appear on the planet remains a long-standing challenge. This is due to the lack of a clear stratigraphic marker for the start date, as human impacts on Earth’s environments are significantly time-transgressive and spatiotemporally variable. Our study revealed that the number of anthropogenic fingerprints in global strata began to increase abruptly from 1952 ± 3 CE. This signal may reflect the onset of key human-induced changes in the Earth system, providing unambiguous stratigraphic evidence. This unprecedented synchronous increase has potential significance for defining the start of the Anthropocene in the future.