冰期
末次冰期最大值
气候变化
中国
人口
新几内亚
自然地理学
人口增长
历史
地理
考古
地质学
全新世
海洋学
古生物学
民族学
人口学
社会学
作者
Shoushu Jiang,Debo Zhao,Stefanie Kaboth‐Bahr,Luc Beaufort,Hua Tu,Zhengyao Lu,Zhongjing Cheng,Shanjia Zhang,Yi Zhong,Xiudong Hao,Wenqiang Pei,Guangqiang Cui,Yifei Yang,Anni Lin,Jie Huang,Shiming Wan
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2500042122
摘要
Fire is a pivotal aspect of human involvement in the carbon cycle. However, the precise timing of the large-scale human fire use remains uncertain. Here, we report a pyrogenic carbon record of East Asian fire history over the past 300,000 y from the East China Sea. This record suggests a rapid increase in fire activity since approximately 50,000 y ago, indicating a decoupling from the monsoon climate, and this pattern is consistent with fire histories in Europe, Southeast Asia, and Papua New Guinea-Australia regions. By integrating extensive archaeological data, we propose that the intensified global expansion of modern human and population growth, coupled with the rising demand for fire use during cold glacial periods, resulted in a significant increase in fire utilization from 50,000 y onward. This suggests that a measurable human imprint on the carbon cycle via fire likely predates the Last Glacial Maximum.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI