Authors
Chris SM Turney, Jonathan Palmer, Mark A Maslin, Alan Hogg, Christopher J Fogwill, John Southon, Pavla Fenwick, Gerhard Helle, Janet M Wilmshurst, Matt McGlone, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, Zoë Thomas, Mathew Lipson, Brent Beaven, Richard T Jones, Oliver Andrews, Quan Hua
Publication date
2018/2/19
Journal
Scientific Reports
Volume
8
Issue
1
Pages
3293
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Anthropogenic activity is now recognised as having profoundly and permanently altered the Earth system, suggesting we have entered a human-dominated geological epoch, the ‘Anthropocene’. To formally define the onset of the Anthropocene, a synchronous global signature within geological-forming materials is required. Here we report a series of precisely-dated tree-ring records from Campbell Island (Southern Ocean) that capture peak atmospheric radiocarbon (14C) resulting from Northern Hemisphere-dominated thermonuclear bomb tests during the 1950s and 1960s. The only alien tree on the island, a Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis), allows us to seasonally-resolve Southern Hemisphere atmospheric 14C, demonstrating the ‘bomb peak’ in this remote and pristine location occurred in the last-quarter of 1965 (October-December), coincident with the broader changes associated with the post-World War II …
Total citations
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