<sup>210</sup>pb dating


Abstract:

During the last decade, there has been an unprecedented push to learn more about how the environment has changed over time. This interest is grounded in trying to better understand differences between natural-and anthropogenic-driven changes and how our environment may respond to such changes in the future. One of the most fundamental steps in establishing a record of environmental change is to first derive an accurate geochronology. The geochronologies generated by210 Pb analysis can resolve the very recent past (last 100–200 years), with total (1s) uncertainties varying from just under 1 year to around a decade (Baskaran, 2011). However,210Pb geochronologies are not without inherent problems and uncertainties (Robbins and Edgington, 1975; von Gunten and Moser, 1993). The development of a210 Pb geochronology should never become a routine exercise (Appleby and Oldfield, 1992; Appleby, 2008). Even some recent studies that employ210 Pb as a geochronometer still fail to meet the minimum requirements identified by Oldfield and Appleby (1984). For example, some of these efforts may fail to adequately evaluate inconsistencies in competing210Pb models, or they may forego assessing210Pb model results against independent geochronologies (e.g., other radioisotope systems or varve counting). Lastly, some210 Pb applications may ignore postdepositional mixing (Benninger et al., 1979; Berner, 1980; Miguel et al., 2003) that can yield a surprisingly plausible down-core210 Pb profile but which produces a geochronological model that is simply invalid (Kirchner, 2011). That said, a carefully developed210 Pb geochronology, and one substantiated in the peer-reviewed literature per recommendations outlined in Smith (2001) and Hancock et al. (2002), is invaluable in any recent environmental reconstruction. Sediment dating using210Pb methods will continue to be refined with new improvements in analytical and model capabilities.

Año de publicación:

2015

Keywords:

    Fuente:

    scopusscopus

    Tipo de documento:

    Book Part

    Estado:

    Acceso restringido

    Áreas de conocimiento:

    • Geocronología

    Áreas temáticas:

    • Geología, hidrología, meteorología
    • Ciencias de la tierra
    • Paleontología