2022
DOI: 10.1029/2022gl098979
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Isotopic Records of Ancient Wildfires in C4 Grasses Preserved in the Sediment of the Ross Sea, Antarctica

Abstract: We report carbon isotopic values in total organic carbon (TOC) and pyrogenic carbon (PyC) preserved in two sediment cores from the Ross Sea, Antarctica. The δ13C values of PyC ranged from −10.9‰ to −17.2‰, with distinct differences from the δ13C values of TOC (−24.1‰ to −26.1‰) in the sediments. The radiocarbon ages of PyC were 9,128 and 8,410 years old on average in the two cores but were thousands of years younger than the ages of TOC at the same core depth. These isotopic records provide strong evidence ind… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Evidence of fire is even preserved in sediments of the Ross Sea, Antarctica, from which Ren et al. (2022) presented a pyrogenic carbon record that suggests frequent large fires in South America from late Pleistocene to mid‐Holocene time. Li et al.…”
Section: Paleofire and Ties To Climatementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Evidence of fire is even preserved in sediments of the Ross Sea, Antarctica, from which Ren et al. (2022) presented a pyrogenic carbon record that suggests frequent large fires in South America from late Pleistocene to mid‐Holocene time. Li et al.…”
Section: Paleofire and Ties To Climatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A study by Ren et al. (2022) projected burned area in a semiarid watershed of Idaho, USA. Their model results indicated an increase in burned area by the 2040s followed by a decrease in the 2070s owing to fire‐limiting thresholds of fuel and flammability that vary with complex vegetation responses to increasing CO 2 and temperature in a warming climate.…”
Section: Recent Past and Future Evolution Of Fire Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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