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The Analytical Scientist / Issues / 2021 / Dec / Dating the Big Tree
Mass Spectrometry Environmental

Dating the Big Tree

How a new approach to radiocarbon dating has helped elucidate the age of Africa’s “tree of life”

By Lauren Robertson 12/02/2021 1 min read

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Adansonia, or baobab trees, are among the longest-living (and largest) plants on Earth. Despite their extraordinary longevity, nine of the 13 largest trees and five of the six oldest have died since 2005 – a phenomenon scientists have linked to climate change. Understanding the age and growth of these plants has never been more important.

In a recent paper, a team of researchers used accelerator MS to radiocarbon date the historic Big Tree at Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. Until now, this famous African baobab, which is over 25 meters high, has outwitted scientists who have attempted to determine its age. This is mostly because baobabs form a different number of tree rings each year, making traditional ring-counting methods obsolete.

The researchers’ results indicate that there are three generations present in the Big Tree, with the oldest stem around 1,150 years old. In the future, this AMS-based approach to radiocarbon dating could help scientists date other trees with complicated growth or architecture.

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References

  1. A Patrut et al., Dendrochronologia, 70, 125898 (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.dendro.2021.125898.

About the Author(s)

Lauren Robertson

By the time I finished my degree in Microbiology I had come to one conclusion – I did not want to work in a lab. Instead, I decided to move to the south of Spain to teach English. After two brilliant years, I realized that I missed science, and what I really enjoyed was communicating scientific ideas – whether that be to four-year-olds or mature professionals. On returning to England I landed a role in science writing and found it combined my passions perfectly. Now at Texere, I get to hone these skills every day by writing about the latest research in an exciting, creative way.

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