Ancient trees reveal medieval solar storm from 1200 ce

Researchers have uncovered evidence of a powerful solar proton event that struck Earth around 1200 ce by analyzing carbon-14 spikes in ancient Japanese trees and cross-referencing medieval records of red auroras.

The study, led by scientists at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, identified the sub-extreme event as occurring between the winter of 1200 ce and the spring of 1201 ce. It combined ultra-precise carbon-14 measurements from buried asunaro trees in Aomori Prefecture with historical accounts, including descriptions of red lights in the northern sky from a Japanese diary and similar reports from China.

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Researchers have found that faint red auroras visible from Japan can extend far higher into the atmosphere than previously thought, even during moderate solar storms.

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Scientists have detected traces of iron-60 in Antarctic ice up to 80,000 years old, showing that the solar system is moving through material from an ancient stellar explosion. The findings come from a study published in Physical Review Letters and point to the Local Interstellar Cloud as the source of the radioactive isotope.

Researchers are debating whether droughts triggered unrest in late Roman Britain during the so-called Barbarian Conspiracy of 367 AD. A study using tree ring data linked severe summer droughts in 364-366 to poor harvests and rebellion, but historians say the historical sources have been misinterpreted. The dispute underscores challenges in combining climate data with historical records.

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Wildfires raging across Arctic and boreal regions are igniting ancient carbon in soils, releasing far more carbon dioxide than climate models have assumed. A new study of soil cores shows that some fires are burning organic matter up to 5,000 years old.

Researchers in South Korea have found stromatolites inside the Hapcheon impact crater, suggesting asteroid strikes created conditions that supported early oxygen-producing life.

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Astronomers have traced a high-energy neutrino to a distant galaxy powered by intense star formation rather than a supermassive black hole. The finding challenges previous assumptions about the origins of cosmic neutrinos.

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