From the emergence of Homo sapiens sapiens on Earth around 140,000 years ago to the present day, humanity has undergone numerous revolutions. From the Neolithic era, when settled life began, to the Industrial Revolution of the 18th century, humans have repeatedly reorganized all aspects of life. In this sense, it might be more accurate to refer to humans not as “thinking beings” but rather as “transforming beings.” Among all historical accelerations, the most significant took place in 1989, when Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web. I believe this invention marks the cornerstone of what can be called humanity’s most recent revolution: the “Information Revolution.” Since 1989, the pace and volume of change have been so immense that in just one second today, we generate more information than humanity did over its entire 140,000-year history. The aim of this article is not to examine each revolution and the transformations they brought, but rather to offer insight into the changes we are likely to experience beyond 2025—through the lens of geography, the “mother of all sciences.” In the future, geology—geography’s most important data source—will reach unprecedented levels. Geologists will carry small handheld devices that can precisely determine the age and formation…