Radiocarbon: A key tracer for studying Earth’s dynamo, climate system, carbon cycle, and Sun
Timothy Heaton, Édouard Bard, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, Martin Butzin, Peter Köhler, Raimund Muscheler, Paula Reimer, Lukas Wacker
Abstract
Using carbon-14 Carbon-14 or radiocarbon, a radioactive isotope produced in the upper atmosphere by cosmic rays, is rapidly incorporated into the terrestrial carbon cycle and provides a way to calculate the age of carbon-bearing materials as old as 55,000 years. Heaton et al . review recent progress that has allowed the construction of better radiocarbon age calibration curves and discuss the new insights into climate processes, the Sun, Earth’s geodynamo, and the carbon cycle that have emerged from these efforts. —HJS
Topics & Concepts
Radiocarbon datingCarbon cycleTRACEREarth system scienceEnvironmental scienceAtmosphere (unit)CalibrationDiurnal cycleEarth scienceClimatologyAtmospheric sciencesGeologyMeteorologyGeographyPaleontologyPhysicsOceanographyEcologyEcosystemQuantum mechanicsNuclear physicsBiologyGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism StudiesAstro and Planetary Science