Tree rings reveal two strong solar proton events in 7176 and 5259 BCE

Author:

Brehm Nicolas1,Christl Marcus1ORCID,Adolphi Florian2ORCID,Muscheler Raimund3ORCID,Synal Hans-Arno1,Mekhaldi Florian3ORCID,Paleari Chiara3ORCID,Leuschner Hanns-Hubert4,Bayliss Alexandra5ORCID,Nicolussi Kurt6ORCID,Pichler Thomas7,Schlüchter Christian8,Pearson Charlotte9,Salzer Matthew9ORCID,Fonti Patrick10ORCID,Nievergelt Daniel10,Hantemirov Rashit11,Brown David12,Usoskin Ilya13ORCID,Wacker Lukas14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ETH Zürich

2. Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

3. Lund University

4. 4Albrecht von Haller Institute for Plant Sciences

5. Historic England

6. University of Innsbruck

7. Universität Innsbruck

8. University of Bern

9. University of Arizona

10. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research

11. Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

12. The Queen’s University

13. University of Oulu

14. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH)

Abstract

Abstract The Sun sporadically produces eruptive events leading to intense fluxes of solar energetic particles (SEPs) that dramatically disrupt the near-Earth radiation environment. Such events are directly studied for the last decades but little is known about the occurrence and magnitude of rare, extreme SEP events. Presently, a few events that produced measurable signals in cosmogenic radionuclides such as 14C, 10Be and 36Cl have been found. Analyzing annual 14C concentrations in tree-rings from Switzerland, Germany, Ireland, Russia, and the USA we discovered two spikes in atmospheric 14C corresponding to 7176 and 5259 BCE. The ~ 2% increases of atmospheric 14C recorded for both events exceed all previously known 14C peaks but after correction for the geomagnetic field, they are comparable to the largest event of this type discovered so far at 775 CE. These strong events serve as accurate time markers for the synchronization with floating tree-ring and ice core records and provide critical information on the previous occurrence of extreme solar events which threaten modern infrastructure.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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