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Radiocarbon Dating of 700-Year-Old Munger Banyan

Radiocarbon Dating of 700-Year-Old Munger Banyan

A Ficus benghalensis in Munger, Bihar, was radiocarbon-dated on 3 July 2026 to about 700 years, making it the oldest accurately dated banyan tree globally.

Key findings

  • Age and chronology: Calibrated dates place origin around 1342 CE; primary branch yielded 652 years, secondary trunk 276 years; older branch gives minimum-tree age ~700 years.
  • Comparative record: Exceeds the previously radiocarbon-dated Indian banyan minimum age of 462 years.
  • Physical extent: Canopy area ≈ 2,500 m².
  • Historical assumption revised: Disproves earlier assignment to late Mughal–early British period (~300–350 years).
  • Publication: Results published in Quaternary Research.

Methodology

  • Technique: Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dating of wood samples.
  • Calibration: Calibrated with IntCal20 and processed using OxCal software.
  • Sampling strategy: Dated exposed secondary trunk and a primary branch to establish minimum age.
  • Protocol significance: Provides an approach for dating tropical broadleaf trees that lack distinct annual growth rings.
  • Institutional lead: Study led from Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (autonomous, DST).

IASPOINT Booster Facts

  • Species: Ficus benghalensis (family Moraceae), a strangler/hemiepiphytic fig with aerial prop roots.
  • AMS principle: Directly counts 14C atoms to estimate sample age from 14C/12C ratio.
  • IntCal20: International calibration curve for converting radiocarbon years to calendar years.
  • OxCal: Bayesian calibration software commonly used in archaeological and palaeoenvironmental dating.
Last Modified: July 4, 2026

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