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Kiloannum

Kiloannum, abbreviated ka, is a unit of time equal to 1,000 years. It is used to express durations and ages on geological and archaeological timescales, where multiple millennia are involved.

Origin and usage: The term combines kilo- (1000) with annus (Latin for year). In scientific writing, ka

Other notations: kyr (kiloyears) is another widely used unit for thousands of years and is sometimes preferred

Examples: The end of the last glacial period is dated to about 11–12 ka in many records,

See also: kyr, Ma, Ga, BP.

is
commonly
used
with
the
concept
of
"present"
as
a
reference.
In
many
contexts,
ka
is
paired
with
"before
present"
(BP),
which
is
anchored
at
1950
CE.
For
example,
2.3
ka
BP
means
2,300
years
before
1950,
corresponding
to
about
350
BCE.
Some
authors,
however,
simply
use
ka
to
denote
thousands
of
years
ago
without
explicit
BP,
understanding
the
reference
as
"as
of
now."
when
avoiding
the
BP
convention.
For
longer
periods,
megaannum
(Ma)
and
gigaannum
(Ga)
are
used,
with
analogous
conventions
(e.g.,
MaBP,
GaBP,
kyr).
and
the
Last
Glacial
Maximum
is
near
21
ka.
Radiometric
dating
and
stratigraphy
commonly
report
ages
in
ka
or
Ma.