Literature DB >> 34735228

Radiocarbon: A key tracer for studying Earth's dynamo, climate system, carbon cycle, and Sun.

T J Heaton1, E Bard2, C Bronk Ramsey3, M Butzin4, P Köhler4, R Muscheler5, P J Reimer6, L Wacker7.   

Abstract

Radiocarbon (14C), as a consequence of its production in the atmosphere and subsequent dispersal through the carbon cycle, is a key tracer for studying the Earth system. Knowledge of past 14C levels improves our understanding of climate processes, the Sun, the geodynamo, and the carbon cycle. Recently updated radiocarbon calibration curves (IntCal20, SHCal20, and Marine20) provide unprecedented accuracy in our estimates of 14C levels back to the limit of the 14C technique (~55,000 years ago). Such improved detail creates new opportunities to probe the Earth and climate system more reliably and at finer scale. We summarize the advances that have underpinned this revised set of radiocarbon calibration curves, survey the broad scientific landscape where additional detail on past 14C provides insight, and identify open challenges for the future.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34735228     DOI: 10.1126/science.abd7096

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


  1 in total

1.  Cosmogenic radiosulfur tracking of solar activity and the strong and long-lasting El Niño events.

Authors:  Mang Lin; Mark H Thiemens
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-05-06       Impact factor: 12.779

  1 in total

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