“…However, these rates were determined using C‐14 techniques, which average over many centuries to millennia and may inherently underestimate C B at decadal time scales from integration of deeper depths and processes (Breithaupt et al, ; Breithaupt et al, ); the majority of C B assessments make use of shorter‐term approaches such as Pb‐210 or space‐for‐time substitutions. From these, soil C B was 18–1,713 g C · m −2 · year −1 in natural saltmarshes (Chmura et al, ), 58–283 g C · m −2 year −1 in constructed Atlantic coastal Spartina alterniflora marshes (Davis et al, ), 45–190 g C · m −2 · year −1 for sea grasses (Mcleod et al, ), 163–226 g C · m −2 · year −1 in natural mangroves globally (Breithaupt et al, ; Mcleod et al, ), 218 g C · m −2 · year −1 for created mangroves in southern Florida (Osland et al, ), and 80–435 g C · m −2 · year −1 in tidal freshwater marshes in Georgia and South Carolina (Drexler et al, ; Loomis & Craft, ). Pb‐210 estimates were 21–65 g C · m −2 · year −1 among our Waccamaw sites (Noe et al, ), compared with 7–51 g C · m −2 · year −1 for C‐14, suggesting that C‐14 techniques are slightly misestimating century‐scale C burial (though not in a consistent direction) but are potentially representative enough for our purposes.…”