Naturally occurring barium (56Ba) is a mix of six stable isotopes and one very long-lived radioactive primordial isotope, barium-130, identified as being unstable by geochemical means (from analysis of the presence of its daughter xenon-130 in rocks) in 2001, presumably decaying by double electron capture with a half-life of (0.5–2.7)×1021 years (about 1011 times the age of the universe). The two measurements are discordant; the above reflects the total range, the value in the table below is a crude average.