Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Richard A. Staff is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Richard A. Staff.


Science | 2012

A complete terrestrial radiocarbon record for 11.2 to 52.8 kyr B.P

Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Richard A. Staff; Charlotte L. Bryant; Fiona Brock; Hiroyuki Kitagawa; Johannes van der Plicht; Gordon Schlolaut; Michael H. Marshall; Achim Brauer; Henry F. Lamb; Rebecca L. Payne; Pavel E. Tarasov; Tsuyoshi Haraguchi; Katsuya Gotanda; Hitoshi Yonenobu; Yusuke Yokoyama; Ryuji Tada; Takeshi Nakagawa

Dating Carbon Radiocarbon dating is the best way to determine the age of samples that contain carbon and that are younger than ∼50,000 years, the limit of precision for the method. There are several factors that complicate such age determinations, however, some of the most important of which include variability of the 14C production in the atmosphere (which affects organic samples whose radiocarbon inventories are derived from atmospheric CO2), surface ocean reservoir effects (which affect marine samples that acquire their radiocarbon signatures from seawater), and variable dead carbon fraction effects (which affect speleothems that derive their carbon from groundwaters). Bronk Ramsey et al. (p. 370; see the Perspective by Reimer) avoid the need to make such assumptions, reporting the 14C results of sediments from Lake Suigetsu, Japan. Analysis of terrestrial plant macrofossils in annually layered datable sediments yielded a direct record of atmospheric radiocarbon for the entire measurable interval up to 52.8 thousand years ago. Radiocarbon measurements of samples from Lake Suigetsu, Japan, extend the 14C time scale back to more than 50,000 years ago. Radiocarbon (14C) provides a way to date material that contains carbon with an age up to ~50,000 years and is also an important tracer of the global carbon cycle. However, the lack of a comprehensive record reflecting atmospheric 14C prior to 12.5 thousand years before the present (kyr B.P.) has limited the application of radiocarbon dating of samples from the Last Glacial period. Here, we report 14C results from Lake Suigetsu, Japan (35°35′N, 135°53′E), which provide a comprehensive record of terrestrial radiocarbon to the present limit of the 14C method. The time scale we present in this work allows direct comparison of Lake Suigetsu paleoclimatic data with other terrestrial climatic records and gives information on the connection between global atmospheric and regional marine radiocarbon levels.


Radiocarbon | 2010

Developments in the Calibration and Modeling of Radiocarbon Dates

Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Michael Dee; Sharen Lee; Takeshi Nakagawa; Richard A. Staff

Calibration is a core element of radiocarbon dating and is undergoing rapid development on a number of different fronts. This is most obvious in the area of 14C archives suitable for calibration purposes, which are now demonstrating much greater coherence over the earlier age range of the technique. Of particular significance to this end is the development of purely terrestrial archives such as those from the Lake Suigetsu sedimentary profile and Kauri tree rings from New Zealand, in addition to the groundwater records from speleothems. Equally important, however, is the development of statistical tools that can be used with, and help develop, such calibration data. In the context of sedimentary deposition, age-depth modeling provides a very useful way to analyze series of measurements from cores, with or without the presence of additional varve information. New methods are under development, making use of model averaging, that generate more robust age models. In addition, all calibration requires a coherent approach to outliers, for both single samples and where entire data sets might be offset relative to the calibration curve. This paper looks at current developments in these areas.


Nature | 2016

Postglacial viability and colonization in North America’s ice-free corridor

Mikkel Winther Pedersen; Anthony Ruter; Charles E. Schweger; Harvey Friebe; Richard A. Staff; Kristian K. Kjeldsen; Marie L. Z. Mendoza; Alwynne B. Beaudoin; Cynthia Zutter; Nicolaj K. Larsen; Ben A. Potter; Rasmus Nielsen; Rebecca A. Rainville; Ludovic Orlando; David J. Meltzer; Kurt H. Kjær

During the Last Glacial Maximum, continental ice sheets isolated Beringia (northeast Siberia and northwest North America) from unglaciated North America. By around 15 to 14 thousand calibrated radiocarbon years before present (cal. kyr bp), glacial retreat opened an approximately 1,500-km-long corridor between the ice sheets. It remains unclear when plants and animals colonized this corridor and it became biologically viable for human migration. We obtained radiocarbon dates, pollen, macrofossils and metagenomic DNA from lake sediment cores in a bottleneck portion of the corridor. We find evidence of steppe vegetation, bison and mammoth by approximately 12.6 cal. kyr bp, followed by open forest, with evidence of moose and elk at about 11.5 cal. kyr bp, and boreal forest approximately 10 cal. kyr bp. Our findings reveal that the first Americans, whether Clovis or earlier groups in unglaciated North America before 12.6 cal. kyr bp, are unlikely to have travelled by this route into the Americas. However, later groups may have used this north–south passageway.


Antiquity | 2013

The early chronology of broomcorn millet ( Panicum miliaceum ) in Europe

Giedre Motuzaite-Matuzeviciute; Richard A. Staff; Harriet V. Hunt; Xinyi Liu; Martin Jones

The majority of the early crops grown in Europe had their origins in south-west Asia, and were part of a package of domestic plants and animals that were introduced by the first farmers. Broomcorn millet, however, offers a very different narrative, being domesticated first in China, but present in Eastern Europe apparently as early as the sixth millennium BC. Might this be evidence of long-distance contact between east and west, long before there is any other evidence for such connections? Or is the existing chronology faulty in some way? To resolve that question, 10 grains of broomcorn millet were directly dated by AMS, taking advantage of the increasing ability to date smaller and smaller samples. These showed that the millet grains were significantly younger than the contexts in which they had been found, and that the hypothesis of an early transmission of the crop from east to west could not be sustained. The importance of direct dating of crop remains such as these is underlined.


The Holocene | 2015

A high-precision age estimate of the Holocene Plinian eruption of Mount Mazama, Oregon, USA:

Joanne Egan; Richard A. Staff; Jeff. J. Blackford

The climactic eruption of Mount Mazama in Oregon, North America, resulted in the deposition of the most widespread Holocene tephra deposit in the conterminous United States and south-western Canada. The tephra forms an isochronous marker horizon for palaeoenvironmental, sedimentary and archaeological reconstructions, despite the current lack of a precise age estimate for the source eruption. Previous radiocarbon age estimates for the eruption have varied, and Greenland ice-core ages are in disagreement. For the Mazama tephra to be fully utilised in tephrochronology and palaeoenvironmental research, a refined (precise and accurate) age for the eruption is required. Here, we apply a meta-analysis of all previously published radiocarbon age estimations (n = 81), and perform Bayesian statistical modelling to this data set, to provide a refined age of 7682–7584 cal. yr BP (95.4% probability range). Although the depositional histories of the published ages vary, this estimate is consistent with that estimated from the GISP2 ice-core of 7627 ± 150 yr BP (Zdanowicz et al., 1999).


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2010

Tracking aquatic change using chlorin‐specific carbon and nitrogen isotopes: The last glacial‐interglacial transition at Lake Suigetsu, Japan

Jonathan J. Tyler; Y. Kashiyama; Naohiko Ohkouchi; Nanako O. Ogawa; Yusuke Yokoyama; Y. Chikaraishi; Richard A. Staff; Minoru Ikehara; C. Bronk Ramsey; Charlotte L. Bryant; Fiona Brock; Katsuya Gotanda; Tsuyoshi Haraguchi; Hitoshi Yonenobu; Takeshi Nakagawa

Joint carbon and nitrogen isotope measurements were made from chlorins (chlorophyll a, phaeophytin a and pyrophaeophytin a) extracted from the last glacial-interglacial transition sediments of Lake Suigetsu, central Japan. These data highlight both the potential and difficulty of using chlorin-specific isotopes to track aquatic change from lake sediments. δ13C and δ15N of the three chlorins show coherent patterns with time, supporting the theory that phaeophytin a and pyrophaeophytin a are early diagenetic products of chlorophyll a and that despite this transition, their isotopic signatures remain intact. However, our data suggest that the isotopic composition of phaeophytin a and pyrophaeophytin a can be imprecise proxies for the isotope composition of chlorophyll a, possibly owing to the complex array of factors which affect the synthesis, transformation and sedimentation of these phaeopigments in nature. The total accumulation of organic matter in Lake Suigetsu appears to be controlled by the balance of allocthonous and authocthonous material as reflected by the C/N ratio. However, both bulk organic and chlorin-specific δ13C show similar changes, suggesting that the first order variability in bulk organic δ13C reflects aquatic change. By contrast, there is no similarity between chlorin and bulk δ15N, suggesting that interpretation of bulk δ15N in this setting is compromised by diagenetic alteration. The isotopic composition of chlorins are interpreted to reflect the response of aquatic primary productivity to post-glacial environmental change. However, further research into the synthesis and transformation of chlorins in the modern environment is required in order to facilitate a more rigorous approach to interpreting isotope ratios in chlorins extracted from sediments.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Punctuated Shutdown of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation during Greenland Stadial 1.

Alan G. Hogg; John Southon; Chris S. M. Turney; Jonathan G. Palmer; Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Pavla Fenwick; Gretel Boswijk; Michael Friedrich; Gerhard Helle; Konrad A. Hughen; Richard T. Jones; Bernd Kromer; Alexandra Noronha; Linda M. Reynard; Richard A. Staff; Lukas Wacker

The Greenland Stadial 1 (GS-1; ~12.9 to 11.65 kyr cal BP) was a period of North Atlantic cooling, thought to have been initiated by North America fresh water runoff that caused a sustained reduction of North Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), resulting in an antiphase temperature response between the hemispheres (the ‘bipolar seesaw’). Here we exploit sub-fossil New Zealand kauri trees to report the first securely dated, decadally-resolved atmospheric radiocarbon (14C) record spanning GS-1. By precisely aligning Southern and Northern Hemisphere tree-ring 14C records with marine 14C sequences we document two relatively short periods of AMOC collapse during the stadial, at ~12,920-12,640 cal BP and 12,050-11,900 cal BP. In addition, our data show that the interhemispheric atmospheric 14C offset was close to zero prior to GS-1, before reaching ‘near-modern’ values at ~12,660 cal BP, consistent with synchronous recovery of overturning in both hemispheres and increased Southern Ocean ventilation. Hence, sustained North Atlantic cooling across GS-1 was not driven by a prolonged AMOC reduction but probably due to an equatorward migration of the Polar Front, reducing the advection of southwesterly air masses to high latitudes. Our findings suggest opposing hemispheric temperature trends were driven by atmospheric teleconnections, rather than AMOC changes.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Journey to the east: Diverse routes and variable flowering times for wheat and barley en route to prehistoric China

Xinyi Liu; Diane L. Lister; Zhijun Zhao; Cameron A. Petrie; Xiongsheng Zeng; Penelope J. Jones; Richard A. Staff; Anil K. Pokharia; Jennifer Bates; Ravindra N. Singh; Steven A Weber; Giedre Motuzaite Matuzeviciute; Guanghui Dong; Haiming Li; Hongliang Lu; Hongen Jiang; Jianxin Wang; Jian Ma; Duo Tian; Guiyun Jin; Liping Zhou; Xiaohong Wu; Martin Jones

Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest them in the autumn of the same year (spring barley). However, when it was first domesticated in southwest Asia, barley was grown between the autumn and subsequent spring (winter barley), to complete their life cycles before the summer drought. The question of when the eastern barley shifted from the original winter habit to flexible growing schedules is of significance in terms of understanding its spread. This article investigates when barley cultivation dispersed from southwest Asia to regions of eastern Asia and how the eastern spring barley evolved in this context. We report 70 new radiocarbon measurements obtained directly from barley grains recovered from archaeological sites in eastern Eurasia. Our results indicate that the eastern dispersals of wheat and barley were distinct in both space and time. We infer that barley had been cultivated in a range of markedly contrasting environments by the second millennium BC. In this context, we consider the distribution of known haplotypes of a flowering-time gene in barley, Ppd-H1, and infer that the distributions of those haplotypes may reflect the early dispersal of barley. These patterns of dispersal resonate with the second and first millennia BC textual records documenting sowing and harvesting times for barley in central/eastern China.


Radiocarbon | 2016

Decadally resolved lateglacial radiocarbon evidence from New Zealand kauri

Alan G. Hogg; John Southon; Chris S. M. Turney; Jonathan G. Palmer; Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Pavla Fenwick; Gretel Boswijk; Ulf Büntgen; Michael Friedrich; Gerhard Helle; Konrad A. Hughen; Richard T. Jones; Bernd Kromer; Alexandra Noronha; Frederick Reinig; Linda M. Reynard; Richard A. Staff; Lukas Wacker

The Last Glacial–Interglacial Transition (LGIT; 15,000–11,000 cal BP) was characterized by complex spatiotemporal patterns of climate change, with numerous studies requiring accurate chronological control to decipher leads from lags in global paleoclimatic, paleoenvironmental, and archaeological records. However, close scrutiny of the few available tree-ring chronologies and radiocarbon-dated sequences composing the IntCal13 14 C calibration curve indicates significant weakness in 14 C calibration across key periods of the LGIT. Here, we present a decadally resolved atmospheric 14 C record derived from New Zealand kauri spanning the Lateglacial from ~13,100–11,365 cal BP. Two floating kauri 14 C time series, curve-matched to IntCal13, serve as a 14 C backbone through the Younger Dryas. The floating Northern Hemisphere (NH) 14 C data sets derived from the YD-B and Central European Lateglacial Master tree-ring series are matched against the new kauri data, forming a robust NH 14 C time series to ~14,200 cal BP. Our results show that IntCal13 is questionable from ~12,200–11,900 cal BP and the ~10,400 BP 14 C plateau is approximately 5 decades too short. The new kauri record and repositioned NH pine 14 C series offer a refinement of the international 14 C calibration curves IntCal13 and SHCal13, providing increased confidence in the correlation of global paleorecords.


Radiocarbon | 2014

Wood Pretreatment Protocols and Measurement of Tree-Ring Standards at the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit (ORAU)

Richard A. Staff; Linda M. Reynard; Fiona Brock; Christopher Bronk Ramsey

This article presents the pretreatment protocols for wood samples processed at the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit (ORAU), including recent implementation of a purification method to α-cellulose for non-routine samples. We examine the long-term reproducibility of measurement on wood samples at ORAU through the >1000 14C determinations made on known-age tree-ring standards processed in each AMS wheel since our present High Voltage Engineering Europa (HVEE) AMS system came on-line in September 2002. A discussion of background measurements is also provided.

Collaboration


Dive into the Richard A. Staff's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gordon Schlolaut

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Achim Brauer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge