The researchers were able to mark the new epoch due to a radiocarbon peak

This was found in the heartwood of a strange and singular tree, a Sitka Spruce

The spike was created by the culmination of mostly Northern Hemisphere atmospheric thermonuclear bomb tests in the 1950s and 1960s

The planet entered a new geological epoch known as the Anthropocene in 1965, according to new research.

The Anthropocene has become a term used by scientists all over the world, seeking to put a marker on when humans began to leave a significant impact on the planet.

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Until now there has been no definitive 'global' signal to enable scientists to officially declare a new epoch.

Now researchers have found the signal for the change by using the accumulation of radiocarbon in tree wood from nuclear bomb tests.

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This Sitka Spruce on Campbell Island is the only tree in a 125 miles (200km) radius. Dubbed 'the loneliest tree in the world' it has been used as a biological marker to show the dawn of the Anthropocene and the signal was fixed in the wood by photosynthesis

The study, led by UCL and University of New South Wales alongside members of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition 2013-2014, provides the first precise global signal for the Anthropocene from the Southern Hemisphere.

The researchers were able to mark the new epoch due to a radiocarbon peak or 'golden spike' found in the heartwood of a strange and singular tree, a Sitka Spruce found on Campbell Island, a World Heritage site in the middle of the Southern Ocean.

The spruce is locally referred to as 'the loneliest tree in the world' with the next closest tree over 125 miles (200km) away on the Auckland Islands.

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The golden spike was created by the culmination of mostly Northern Hemisphere atmospheric thermonuclear bomb tests in the 1950s and 1960s.

The signal was fixed in the wood of the Campbell Island Sitka spruce by photosynthesis.

'We were incredibly excited to find this signal in the Southern Hemisphere on a remote island, because for the first time it gave us a well-defined global signature for a new geological epoch that could be preserved in the geological record,' said lead author Professor Chris Turney from the University of New South Wales.

'Thousands of years from now this golden spike should still stand as a detectable marker for the transformation of the Earth by humankind,' added Professor Turney.

The radiocarbon peak - known as the golden spike - was created by the culmination of mostly Northern Hemisphere atmospheric thermonuclear bomb tests in the 1950s and 1960s. The first nuclear test happened in 1954 (pictured) and triggered the nuclear age

In the Northern Hemisphere, the atmospheric radiocarbon peak occurred in 1964 where the signal is preserved in European trees.

That same peak took until late 1965 (October – December) to reach the Southern Hemisphere atmosphere.

With that spruce, the signal became global, precise and detectable in the geological record, meaning it fitted the requirements as a marker for a new epoch.

The 100-year-old tree itself is an anomaly in the Southern Ocean.

WHAT IS THE ANTHROPOCENE? The Anthropocene is the name of a proposed geological epoch that may soon enter the official Geologic Time Scale. It refers to a time in which human permanently changed the planet. According to the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS), we are officially in the Holocene epoch, which began 11,700 years ago after the last major ice age. Some experts argue we should now change the name to 'Anthropocene'. This is from from anthropo, for 'man,' and cene, for 'new'. But up until now, experts have been divided on when mankind caused a lasting impact on the Earth's geology with some suggesting 1964 when the fallout from atomic testing became apparent.

It is naturally found along the North American Pacific Coast but it is credited with being planted on Campbell Island by the Governor of New Zealand in 1901.

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The oceanic climate has had an unusual effect on the spruce.

Although it has grown to 33 feet (10m) tall, the tree has never produced cones, suggesting it has remained in a permanently juvenile state.

'It seems somehow apt that this extraordinary tree, planted far from its normal habitat by humans has also become a marker for the changes we have made to the planet,' said co-author Professor Mark Maslin at UCL.

'It is yet further evidence, if that was needed, that in this new epoch no part of our planet remains untouched by humans,' added Professor Maslin.

The study was published in Scientific Reports.