Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides

Burial dating using in situ produced terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides is a relatively new method to date sediments and quantify geomorphological processes such as erosion, accumulation and river incision. Burial dating utilises the decay of previously in situ produced cosmogenic nuclides and can be a...

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Main Authors: A. Dehnert, C. Schlüchter
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Copernicus Publications 2008-08-01
Series:Eiszeitalter und Gegenwart
Online Access:https://www.eg-quaternary-sci-j.net/57/210/2008/egqsj-57-210-2008.pdf
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spelling doaj-5cf0a89b0dd94ed89d70fd8040ecc92d2020-11-25T00:10:12ZdeuCopernicus PublicationsEiszeitalter und Gegenwart0424-71162199-90902008-08-015721022510.3285/eg.57.1-2.8Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclidesA. DehnertC. SchlüchterBurial dating using in situ produced terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides is a relatively new method to date sediments and quantify geomorphological processes such as erosion, accumulation and river incision. Burial dating utilises the decay of previously in situ produced cosmogenic nuclides and can be applied to sedimentary deposits such as cave fillings, alluvial fans, river terraces, delta deposits, and dunes. Using the established 10Be/26Al nuclide pair allows numerical dating of quartz bearing material from ~100 ka to 5 Ma, where other dateable material is often unavailable. To date, a number of studies have demonstrated the successful application of in situ produced cosmogenic nuclides in various scientific disciplines, such as Quaternary geology, geomorphology and palaeoanthropology. However, insufficiently defined physical properties such as nuclide half lives and complex depth dependent nuclide production rates result in relatively large uncertainties. Nevertheless, burial dating represents a promising method for determining numerical ages.https://www.eg-quaternary-sci-j.net/57/210/2008/egqsj-57-210-2008.pdf
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Dehnert
C. Schlüchter
spellingShingle A. Dehnert
C. Schlüchter
Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides
Eiszeitalter und Gegenwart
author_facet A. Dehnert
C. Schlüchter
author_sort A. Dehnert
title Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides
title_short Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides
title_full Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides
title_fullStr Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides
title_full_unstemmed Sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides
title_sort sediment burial dating using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Eiszeitalter und Gegenwart
issn 0424-7116
2199-9090
publishDate 2008-08-01
description Burial dating using in situ produced terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides is a relatively new method to date sediments and quantify geomorphological processes such as erosion, accumulation and river incision. Burial dating utilises the decay of previously in situ produced cosmogenic nuclides and can be applied to sedimentary deposits such as cave fillings, alluvial fans, river terraces, delta deposits, and dunes. Using the established 10Be/26Al nuclide pair allows numerical dating of quartz bearing material from ~100 ka to 5 Ma, where other dateable material is often unavailable. To date, a number of studies have demonstrated the successful application of in situ produced cosmogenic nuclides in various scientific disciplines, such as Quaternary geology, geomorphology and palaeoanthropology. However, insufficiently defined physical properties such as nuclide half lives and complex depth dependent nuclide production rates result in relatively large uncertainties. Nevertheless, burial dating represents a promising method for determining numerical ages.
url https://www.eg-quaternary-sci-j.net/57/210/2008/egqsj-57-210-2008.pdf
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AT cschluchter sedimentburialdatingusingterrestrialcosmogenicnuclides
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