. Radiocarbon (∆14C) measurements of monthly samples from a Galapagos surface coral are among the first
data sets from the new Keck Carbon Cycle Accelerator Mass Spectrometry laboratory at the University of California, Irvine.
An average ∆14C value of –62‰ is obtained for 144 measurements of samples from monthly coral bands that lived from
about AD 1760–1771 (±6 yr). High ∆14C values were found during January through March, when upwelling was weak or
absent at the Galapagos Islands. Low ∆14C values were obtained mid-year during strong upwelling. The average seasonal
variability of ∆14C was 15–25‰, which is greater than that at other tropical and subtropical locations in the Pacific Ocean
because of intense seasonal upwelling at this site. Periods of sustained high ∆14C values were found during 1762–1763 and
1766. A spectral analysis revealed that the spectral density for the ∆14C data displays most of its variance at the 5-yr cycle,
which is reflective of El Niño periodicity during the 20th century.