English edit

Etymology edit

geo- +‎ -cratic

Adjective edit

geocratic (not comparable)

  1. Characterized by increase in land masses relative to areas covered by oceans.
    • 1987, Michael I. Budyko, Alexander B. Ronov, Alexander L. Yanshin, History of the Earth’s Atmosphere, page 45:
      This is its minimal area, since we live in a geocratic epoch characterized by sea regression from elevated continents. Geocratic epochs have also occurred in the past and were associated with the final stages of geotectonic cycles (Fig. 6).
    • 1994, American Journal of Science, volume 294, page 779:
      The contemporary epoch should be identified as geocratic, characterized by regression from elevated continents. Ancient geocratic epochs correspond to the final stages of tectonic cycles: []
    • 2000, David Kowalewski, Deep Power: The Political Ecology of Wilderness and Civilization:
      The healing of alienated, self-destructive humans and the creation of an integrated, survivable community requires a geocratic approach to policymaking.

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