Radiocarbon is key to understanding Earth鈥檚 past

Radiocarbon records are critical to understanding the history of Earth鈥檚 climate, magnetic field, and the Sun鈥檚 activity, say researchers.

Earth from space
  • Radiocarbon is critical to trace and understand changes in Earth鈥檚 climate, carbon cycle and magnetic field, and the Sun鈥檚 activity, up to 55,000 years ago
  • Scientists have highlighted how recent developments in radiocarbon could be key to help scientists improve future climate projections
  • Radiocarbon also provides a vital dating method  used across archaeology and geoscience to date everything from the oldest modern human bones to historic climate patterns

Radiocarbon records are critical to understanding the history of Earth鈥檚 climate, magnetic field, and the Sun鈥檚 activity, say researchers.

In an article published in the journal Science, scientists have highlighted how recent advances in our knowledge of past radiocarbon levels are improving our understanding of climate processes, solar activity, geophysics and the carbon cycle.

Understanding the past is essential to understanding our present and to projecting Earth鈥檚 potential changes in the future. Developing an accurate record of atmospheric radiocarbon extending back 55,000 years helps researchers understand Earth鈥檚 processes and consequently improve projections of climate change.

Radiocarbon also tells us about the possibility of past extreme solar storms, orders of magnitude greater than any instrumentally observed. Similar storms today would have the potential to catastrophically damage our communications networks and electricity grids.

Dr Tim Heaton, Lead Author and Senior Lecturer from the University of 葫芦影业鈥檚 School of Mathematics and Statistics, said: 鈥淩adiocarbon is best known as the tool by which we date and synchronise many of the various archaeological and climate records from the last 55,000 years. However, past levels of radiocarbon are also critical to understand the Sun, the geodynamo, past climate, and changes in the carbon cycle.

鈥淩ecent years have seen a revolution in our ability to construct detailed records of past radiocarbon levels, leading to new insights in the chronology of past climate events, changes in the Sun鈥檚 activity, carbon cycle and fluxes in Carbon Dioxide (CO2) levels.鈥

Developments in radiocarbon dating have allowed the IntCal Working Group to estimate radiocarbon levels with unprecedented accuracy back to the limits of the technique ~55,000 years ago.

Last year the IntCal Working Group recalculated the internationally-agreed radiocarbon calibration curves for the first time in seven years, making them more detailed than ever before.

They used measurements from almost 15,000 samples from objects dating back as far as 60,000 years ago to create the new radiocarbon calibration curves, which are fundamental across the scientific spectrum for accurately dating artefacts, and understanding the Earth and climate systems.

Radiocarbon is vital to geoscience and archaeology. Scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) rely upon radiocarbon to improve their models 鈥 as a proxy for the Sun, and as a target to improve their understanding of the Earth system 鈥 and as a clock to date most paleoclimatic records over the past 55,000 years. This is essential to better understand and prepare for future changes in climate. Archaeologists use radiocarbon dating to understand pivotal changes in our societal systems that help to explain our present and answer the grand challenges we face today. 


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