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Isotope geochemistry

Isotope geochemistry is an aspect of geology based upon the study of natural variations in the relative abundances of isotopes of various elements. Variations in isotopic abundance are measured by isotope-ratio mass spectrometry, and can reveal information about the ages and origins of rock, air or water bodies, or processes of mixing between them.

Stable isotope geochemistry is largely concerned with isotopic variations arising from mass-dependent isotope fractionation, whereas radiogenic isotope geochemistry is concerned with the products of natural radioactivity.

Stable isotope geochemistry edit

For most stable isotopes, the magnitude of fractionation from kinetic and equilibrium fractionation is very small; for this reason, enrichments are typically reported in "per mil" (‰, parts per thousand).[1] These enrichments (δ) represent the ratio of heavy isotope to light isotope in the sample over the ratio of a standard. That is,

 

Hydrogen edit

Carbon edit

Carbon has two stable isotopes, 12C and 13C, and one radioactive isotope, 14C.

The stable carbon isotope ratio, δ13C, is measured against Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite (VPDB)[clarification needed].[2] The stable carbon isotopes are fractionated primarily by photosynthesis (Faure, 2004). The 13C/12C ratio is also an indicator of paleoclimate: a change in the ratio in the remains of plants indicates a change in the amount of photosynthetic activity, and thus in how favorable the environment was for the plants. During photosynthesis, organisms using the C3 pathway show different enrichments compared to those using the C4 pathway, allowing scientists not only to distinguish organic matter from abiotic carbon, but also what type of photosynthetic pathway the organic matter was using.[1] Occasional spikes in the global 13C/12C ratio have also been useful as stratigraphic markers for chemostratigraphy, especially during the Paleozoic.[3]

The 14C ratio has been used to track ocean circulation, among other things.

Nitrogen edit

Nitrogen has two stable isotopes, 14N and 15N. The ratio between these is measured relative to nitrogen in ambient air.[2] Nitrogen ratios are frequently linked to agricultural activities. Nitrogen isotope data has also been used to measure the amount of exchange of air between the stratosphere and troposphere using data from the greenhouse gas N2O.[4]

Oxygen edit

Oxygen has three stable isotopes, 16O, 17O, and 18O. Oxygen ratios are measured relative to Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW) or Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite (VPDB).[2] Variations in oxygen isotope ratios are used to track both water movement, paleoclimate,[1] and atmospheric gases such as ozone and carbon dioxide.[5] Typically, the VPDB oxygen reference is used for paleoclimate, while VSMOW is used for most other applications.[1] Oxygen isotopes appear in anomalous ratios in atmospheric ozone, resulting from mass-independent fractionation.[6] Isotope ratios in fossilized foraminifera have been used to deduce the temperature of ancient seas.[7]

Sulfur edit

Sulfur has four stable isotopes, with the following abundances: 32S (0.9502), 33S (0.0075), 34S (0.0421) and 36S (0.0002). These abundances are compared to those found in Cañon Diablo troilite.[5] Variations in sulfur isotope ratios are used to study the origin of sulfur in an orebody and the temperature of formation of sulfur–bearing minerals as well as a biosignature that can reveal presence of sulfate reducing microbes.[8][9]

Radiogenic isotope geochemistry edit

Radiogenic isotopes provide powerful tracers for studying the ages and origins of Earth systems.[10] They are particularly useful to understand mixing processes between different components, because (heavy) radiogenic isotope ratios are not usually fractionated by chemical processes.

Radiogenic isotope tracers are most powerful when used together with other tracers: The more tracers used, the more control on mixing processes. An example of this application is to the evolution of the Earth's crust and Earth's mantle through geological time.

Lead–lead isotope geochemistry edit

Lead has four stable isotopes: 204Pb, 206Pb, 207Pb, and 208Pb.

Lead is created in the Earth via decay of actinide elements, primarily uranium and thorium.

Lead isotope geochemistry is useful for providing isotopic dates on a variety of materials. Because the lead isotopes are created by decay of different transuranic elements, the ratios of the four lead isotopes to one another can be very useful in tracking the source of melts in igneous rocks, the source of sediments and even the origin of people via isotopic fingerprinting of their teeth, skin and bones.

It has been used to date ice cores from the Arctic shelf, and provides information on the source of atmospheric lead pollution.

Lead–lead isotopes has been successfully used in forensic science to fingerprint bullets, because each batch of ammunition has its own peculiar 204Pb/206Pb vs 207Pb/208Pb ratio.

Samarium–neodymium edit

Samariumneodymium is an isotope system which can be utilised to provide a date as well as isotopic fingerprints of geological materials, and various other materials including archaeological finds (pots, ceramics).

147Sm decays to produce 143Nd with a half life of 1.06x1011 years.

Dating is achieved usually by trying to produce an isochron of several minerals within a rock specimen. The initial 143Nd/144Nd ratio is determined.

This initial ratio is modelled relative to CHUR (the Chondritic Uniform Reservoir), which is an approximation of the chondritic material which formed the solar system. CHUR was determined by analysing chondrite and achondrite meteorites.

The difference in the ratio of the sample relative to CHUR can give information on a model age of extraction from the mantle (for which an assumed evolution has been calculated relative to CHUR) and to whether this was extracted from a granitic source (depleted in radiogenic Nd), the mantle, or an enriched source.

Rhenium–osmium edit

Rhenium and osmium are siderophile elements which are present at very low abundances in the crust. Rhenium undergoes radioactive decay to produce osmium. The ratio of non-radiogenic osmium to radiogenic osmium throughout time varies.

Rhenium prefers to enter sulfides more readily than osmium. Hence, during melting of the mantle, rhenium is stripped out, and prevents the osmium–osmium ratio from changing appreciably. This locks in an initial osmium ratio of the sample at the time of the melting event. Osmium–osmium initial ratios are used to determine the source characteristic and age of mantle melting events.

Noble gas isotopes edit

Natural isotopic variations amongst the noble gases result from both radiogenic and nucleogenic production processes. Because of their unique properties, it is useful to distinguish them from the conventional radiogenic isotope systems described above.

Helium-3 edit

Helium-3 was trapped in the planet when it formed. Some 3He is being added by meteoric dust, primarily collecting on the bottom of oceans (although due to subduction, all oceanic tectonic plates are younger than continental plates). However, 3He will be degassed from oceanic sediment during subduction, so cosmogenic 3He is not affecting the concentration or noble gas ratios of the mantle.

Helium-3 is created by cosmic ray bombardment, and by lithium spallation reactions which generally occur in the crust. Lithium spallation is the process by which a high-energy neutron bombards a lithium atom, creating a 3He and a 4He ion. This requires significant lithium to adversely affect the 3He/4He ratio.

All degassed helium is lost to space eventually, due to the average speed of helium exceeding the escape velocity for the Earth. Thus, it is assumed the helium content and ratios of Earth's atmosphere have remained essentially stable.

It has been observed that 3He is present in volcano emissions and oceanic ridge samples. How 3He is stored in the planet is under investigation, but it is associated with the mantle and is used as a marker of material of deep origin.

Due to similarities in helium and carbon in magma chemistry, outgassing of helium requires the loss of volatile components (water, carbon dioxide) from the mantle, which happens at depths of less than 60 km. However, 3He is transported to the surface primarily trapped in the crystal lattice of minerals within fluid inclusions.

Helium-4 is created by radiogenic production (by decay of uranium/thorium-series elements). The continental crust has become enriched with those elements relative to the mantle and thus more He4 is produced in the crust than in the mantle.

The ratio (R) of 3He to 4He is often used to represent 3He content. R usually is given as a multiple of the present atmospheric ratio (Ra).

Common values for R/Ra:

  • Old continental crust: less than 1
  • mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB): 7 to 9
  • Spreading ridge rocks: 9.1 plus or minus 3.6
  • Hotspot rocks: 5 to 42
  • Ocean and terrestrial water: 1
  • Sedimentary formation water: less than 1
  • Thermal spring water: 3 to 11

3He/4He isotope chemistry is being used to date groundwaters, estimate groundwater flow rates, track water pollution, and provide insights into hydrothermal processes, igneous geology and ore genesis.

  • (U-Th)/He dating of apatite as a thermal history tool

Isotopes in actinide decay chains edit

Isotopes in the decay chains of actinides are unique amongst radiogenic isotopes because they are both radiogenic and radioactive. Because their abundances are normally quoted as activity ratios rather than atomic ratios, they are best considered separately from the other radiogenic isotope systems.

Protactinium/Thorium – 231Pa / 230Th edit

Uranium is well mixed in the ocean, and its decay produces 231Pa and 230Th at a constant activity ratio (0.093). The decay products are rapidly removed by adsorption on settling particles, but not at equal rates. 231Pa has a residence equivalent to the residence time of deep water in the Atlantic basin (around 1000 yrs) but 230Th is removed more rapidly (centuries). Thermohaline circulation effectively exports 231Pa from the Atlantic into the Southern Ocean, while most of the 230Th remains in Atlantic sediments. As a result, there is a relationship between 231Pa/230Th in Atlantic sediments and the rate of overturning: faster overturning produces lower sediment 231Pa/230Th ratio, while slower overturning increases this ratio. The combination of δ13C and 231Pa/230Th can therefore provide a more complete insight into past circulation changes.

Anthropogenic isotopes edit

Tritium/helium-3 edit

Tritium was released to the atmosphere during atmospheric testing of nuclear bombs. Radioactive decay of tritium produces the noble gas helium-3. Comparing the ratio of tritium to helium-3 (3H/3He) allows estimation of the age of recent ground waters. A small amount of Tritium is also produced naturally by cosmic ray spallation and spontaneous ternary fission in natural uranium and thorium, but due to the relatively short half-life of Tritium and the relatively small quantities (compared to those from humandmade sources) those sources of Tritium usually play only a secondary role in the analysis of groundwater.

  • USGS Tritium/Helium-3 Dating
  • Hydrologic Isotope Tracers - Helium

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Drever, James (2002). The Geochemistry of Natural Waters. New Jersey: Prentice Hall. pp. 311–322. ISBN 978-0-13-272790-7.
  2. ^ a b c "USGS -- Isotope Tracers -- Resources -- Isotope Geochemistry". Retrieved 2009-01-18.
  3. ^ Saltzman, Matthew R (2002). "Carbon isotope (d13C) stratigraphy across the Silurian-Devonian transition in North America: evidence for a perturbation of the global carbon cycle" (PDF). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 187 (1–2): 83–100. Bibcode:2002PPP...187...83S. doi:10.1016/s0031-0182(02)00510-2. Retrieved 7 Jan 2017.
  4. ^ Park, S.; Atlas, E. L.; Boering, K. A. (2004). "Measurements of N2O isotopologues in the stratosphere". Journal of Geophysical Research. 109 (D1): D01305. Bibcode:2004JGRD..109.1305P. doi:10.1029/2003JD003731. S2CID 140545969.
  5. ^ a b Brenninkmeijer, C. A. M.; Janssen, C.; Kaiser, J.; Röckmann, T.; Rhee, T. S.; Assonov, S. S. (2003). "Isotope effects in the chemistry of atmospheric trace compounds". Chemical Reviews. 103 (12): 5125–5161. doi:10.1021/cr020644k. PMID 14664646.
  6. ^ Mauersberger, K. (1987). "Ozone isotope measurements in the stratosphere". Geophysical Research Letters. 14 (1): 80–83. Bibcode:1987GeoRL..14...80M. doi:10.1029/GL014i001p00080.
  7. ^ Emiliani, C.; Edwards, G. (1953). "Tertiary ocean bottom temperatures". Nature. 171 (4359): 887–888. Bibcode:1953Natur.171..887E. doi:10.1038/171887c0. S2CID 4239689.
  8. ^ Rollinson, H.R. (1993). Using Geochemical Data: Evaluation, Presentation, Interpretation Longman Scientific & Technical. ISBN 978-0-582-06701-1
  9. ^ Drake, Henrik; Roberts, Nick M. W.; Reinhardt, Manuel; Whitehouse, Martin; Ivarsson, Magnus; Karlsson, Andreas; Kooijman, Ellen; Kielman-Schmitt, Melanie (2021-06-03). "Biosignatures of ancient microbial life are present across the igneous crust of the Fennoscandian shield". Communications Earth & Environment. 2 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1038/s43247-021-00170-2. ISSN 2662-4435.
  10. ^ Dickin, A.P. (2005). . Cambridge University Press. Archived from the original on 2014-03-27. Retrieved 2013-10-10.

References edit

General edit

  • Allègre C.J., 2008. Isotope Geology (Cambridge University Press).
  • Dickin A.P., 2005. Radiogenic Isotope Geology (Cambridge University Press).
  • Faure G., Mensing T. M. (2004), Isotopes: Principles and Applications (John Wiley & Sons).
  • Hoefs J., 2004. Stable Isotope Geochemistry (Springer Verlag).
  • Sharp Z., 2006. Principles of Stable Isotope Geochemistry (Prentice Hall).

Stable isotopes edit

  • Environmental Isotopes  (University of Ottawa)
  • Fundamentals of Isotope Geochemistry  (C. Kendall & E.A. Caldwell, chap.2 in Isotope Tracers in Catchment Hydrology [edited by C. Kendall & J.J. McDonnell], 1998)
  • Stable Isotopes and Mineral Resource Investigations in the United States  (USGS)

3He/4He edit

  • Burnard P. G.; Farley K. A.; Turner G. (1998). "Multiple fluid pulses in a Samoan harzburgite". Chemical Geology. 147 (1–2): 99–114. Bibcode:1998ChGeo.147...99B. doi:10.1016/s0009-2541(97)00175-7.
  • Kirstein L., Timmerman M. (2000). "Evidence of the proto-Iceland lume in northwestern Ireland at 42Ma from helium isotopes". Journal of the Geological Society, London. 157 (5): 923–927. Bibcode:2000JGSoc.157..923K. doi:10.1144/jgs.157.5.923. S2CID 128600558.
  • Porcelli D.; Halliday, A. N. (2001). "The core as a possible source of mantle helium". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 192 (1): 45–56. Bibcode:2001E&PSL.192...45P. doi:10.1016/s0012-821x(01)00418-6.

Re–Os edit

  • Arne D.; Bierlein F. P.; Morgan J. W.; Stein H. J. (2001). "Re-Os dating of sulfides associated with gold mineralisation in central Victoria, Australia". Economic Geology. 96 (6): 1455–1459. doi:10.2113/96.6.1455.
  • Martin C (1991). "Osmium isotopic characteristics of mantle-derived rocks". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 55 (5): 1421–1434. Bibcode:1991GeCoA..55.1421M. doi:10.1016/0016-7037(91)90318-y.

External links edit

  • National Isotope Development Center Reference information on isotopes, and coordination and management of isotope production, availability, and distribution
  • Isotope Development & Production for Research and Applications (IDPRA) U.S. Department of Energy program for isotope production and production research and development

isotope, geochemistry, aspect, geology, based, upon, study, natural, variations, relative, abundances, isotopes, various, elements, variations, isotopic, abundance, measured, isotope, ratio, mass, spectrometry, reveal, information, about, ages, origins, rock, . Isotope geochemistry is an aspect of geology based upon the study of natural variations in the relative abundances of isotopes of various elements Variations in isotopic abundance are measured by isotope ratio mass spectrometry and can reveal information about the ages and origins of rock air or water bodies or processes of mixing between them Stable isotope geochemistry is largely concerned with isotopic variations arising from mass dependent isotope fractionation whereas radiogenic isotope geochemistry is concerned with the products of natural radioactivity Contents 1 Stable isotope geochemistry 1 1 Hydrogen 1 2 Carbon 1 3 Nitrogen 1 4 Oxygen 1 5 Sulfur 2 Radiogenic isotope geochemistry 2 1 Lead lead isotope geochemistry 2 2 Samarium neodymium 2 3 Rhenium osmium 3 Noble gas isotopes 3 1 Helium 3 4 Isotopes in actinide decay chains 4 1 Protactinium Thorium 231Pa 230Th 5 Anthropogenic isotopes 5 1 Tritium helium 3 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 General 8 2 Stable isotopes 8 3 3He 4He 8 4 Re Os 9 External linksStable isotope geochemistry editFor most stable isotopes the magnitude of fractionation from kinetic and equilibrium fractionation is very small for this reason enrichments are typically reported in per mil parts per thousand 1 These enrichments d represent the ratio of heavy isotope to light isotope in the sample over the ratio of a standard That is d C 13 C 13 C 12 s a m p l e C 13 C 12 s t a n d a r d 1 1000 displaystyle delta ce 13 C left frac left frac ce 13 C ce 12 C right sample left frac ce 13 C ce 12 C right standard 1 right times 1000 nbsp Hydrogen edit Main article Hydrogen isotope biogeochemistry Carbon edit Main article d13C Carbon has two stable isotopes 12C and 13C and one radioactive isotope 14C The stable carbon isotope ratio d13C is measured against Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite VPDB clarification needed 2 The stable carbon isotopes are fractionated primarily by photosynthesis Faure 2004 The 13C 12C ratio is also an indicator of paleoclimate a change in the ratio in the remains of plants indicates a change in the amount of photosynthetic activity and thus in how favorable the environment was for the plants During photosynthesis organisms using the C3 pathway show different enrichments compared to those using the C4 pathway allowing scientists not only to distinguish organic matter from abiotic carbon but also what type of photosynthetic pathway the organic matter was using 1 Occasional spikes in the global 13C 12C ratio have also been useful as stratigraphic markers for chemostratigraphy especially during the Paleozoic 3 The 14C ratio has been used to track ocean circulation among other things Nitrogen edit Nitrogen has two stable isotopes 14N and 15N The ratio between these is measured relative to nitrogen in ambient air 2 Nitrogen ratios are frequently linked to agricultural activities Nitrogen isotope data has also been used to measure the amount of exchange of air between the stratosphere and troposphere using data from the greenhouse gas N2O 4 Oxygen edit Oxygen has three stable isotopes 16O 17O and 18O Oxygen ratios are measured relative to Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water VSMOW or Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite VPDB 2 Variations in oxygen isotope ratios are used to track both water movement paleoclimate 1 and atmospheric gases such as ozone and carbon dioxide 5 Typically the VPDB oxygen reference is used for paleoclimate while VSMOW is used for most other applications 1 Oxygen isotopes appear in anomalous ratios in atmospheric ozone resulting from mass independent fractionation 6 Isotope ratios in fossilized foraminifera have been used to deduce the temperature of ancient seas 7 Sulfur edit Sulfur has four stable isotopes with the following abundances 32S 0 9502 33S 0 0075 34S 0 0421 and 36S 0 0002 These abundances are compared to those found in Canon Diablo troilite 5 Variations in sulfur isotope ratios are used to study the origin of sulfur in an orebody and the temperature of formation of sulfur bearing minerals as well as a biosignature that can reveal presence of sulfate reducing microbes 8 9 Radiogenic isotope geochemistry editMain article Radiometric dating Radiogenic isotopes provide powerful tracers for studying the ages and origins of Earth systems 10 They are particularly useful to understand mixing processes between different components because heavy radiogenic isotope ratios are not usually fractionated by chemical processes Radiogenic isotope tracers are most powerful when used together with other tracers The more tracers used the more control on mixing processes An example of this application is to the evolution of the Earth s crust and Earth s mantle through geological time Lead lead isotope geochemistry edit Main article Lead lead dating Lead has four stable isotopes 204Pb 206Pb 207Pb and 208Pb Lead is created in the Earth via decay of actinide elements primarily uranium and thorium Lead isotope geochemistry is useful for providing isotopic dates on a variety of materials Because the lead isotopes are created by decay of different transuranic elements the ratios of the four lead isotopes to one another can be very useful in tracking the source of melts in igneous rocks the source of sediments and even the origin of people via isotopic fingerprinting of their teeth skin and bones It has been used to date ice cores from the Arctic shelf and provides information on the source of atmospheric lead pollution Lead lead isotopes has been successfully used in forensic science to fingerprint bullets because each batch of ammunition has its own peculiar 204Pb 206Pb vs 207Pb 208Pb ratio Samarium neodymium edit Main article Samarium neodymium dating Samarium neodymium is an isotope system which can be utilised to provide a date as well as isotopic fingerprints of geological materials and various other materials including archaeological finds pots ceramics 147Sm decays to produce 143Nd with a half life of 1 06x1011 years Dating is achieved usually by trying to produce an isochron of several minerals within a rock specimen The initial 143Nd 144Nd ratio is determined This initial ratio is modelled relative to CHUR the Chondritic Uniform Reservoir which is an approximation of the chondritic material which formed the solar system CHUR was determined by analysing chondrite and achondrite meteorites The difference in the ratio of the sample relative to CHUR can give information on a model age of extraction from the mantle for which an assumed evolution has been calculated relative to CHUR and to whether this was extracted from a granitic source depleted in radiogenic Nd the mantle or an enriched source Rhenium osmium edit Main article Rhenium osmium dating Rhenium and osmium are siderophile elements which are present at very low abundances in the crust Rhenium undergoes radioactive decay to produce osmium The ratio of non radiogenic osmium to radiogenic osmium throughout time varies Rhenium prefers to enter sulfides more readily than osmium Hence during melting of the mantle rhenium is stripped out and prevents the osmium osmium ratio from changing appreciably This locks in an initial osmium ratio of the sample at the time of the melting event Osmium osmium initial ratios are used to determine the source characteristic and age of mantle melting events Noble gas isotopes editNatural isotopic variations amongst the noble gases result from both radiogenic and nucleogenic production processes Because of their unique properties it is useful to distinguish them from the conventional radiogenic isotope systems described above Helium 3 edit Helium 3 was trapped in the planet when it formed Some 3He is being added by meteoric dust primarily collecting on the bottom of oceans although due to subduction all oceanic tectonic plates are younger than continental plates However 3He will be degassed from oceanic sediment during subduction so cosmogenic 3He is not affecting the concentration or noble gas ratios of the mantle Helium 3 is created by cosmic ray bombardment and by lithium spallation reactions which generally occur in the crust Lithium spallation is the process by which a high energy neutron bombards a lithium atom creating a 3He and a 4He ion This requires significant lithium to adversely affect the 3He 4He ratio All degassed helium is lost to space eventually due to the average speed of helium exceeding the escape velocity for the Earth Thus it is assumed the helium content and ratios of Earth s atmosphere have remained essentially stable It has been observed that 3He is present in volcano emissions and oceanic ridge samples How 3He is stored in the planet is under investigation but it is associated with the mantle and is used as a marker of material of deep origin Due to similarities in helium and carbon in magma chemistry outgassing of helium requires the loss of volatile components water carbon dioxide from the mantle which happens at depths of less than 60 km However 3He is transported to the surface primarily trapped in the crystal lattice of minerals within fluid inclusions Helium 4 is created by radiogenic production by decay of uranium thorium series elements The continental crust has become enriched with those elements relative to the mantle and thus more He4 is produced in the crust than in the mantle The ratio R of 3He to 4He is often used to represent 3He content R usually is given as a multiple of the present atmospheric ratio Ra Common values for R Ra Old continental crust less than 1 mid ocean ridge basalt MORB 7 to 9 Spreading ridge rocks 9 1 plus or minus 3 6 Hotspot rocks 5 to 42 Ocean and terrestrial water 1 Sedimentary formation water less than 1 Thermal spring water 3 to 113He 4He isotope chemistry is being used to date groundwaters estimate groundwater flow rates track water pollution and provide insights into hydrothermal processes igneous geology and ore genesis U Th He dating of apatite as a thermal history tool USGS Helium Discharge at Mammoth Mountain Fumarole MMF Isotopes in actinide decay chains editIsotopes in the decay chains of actinides are unique amongst radiogenic isotopes because they are both radiogenic and radioactive Because their abundances are normally quoted as activity ratios rather than atomic ratios they are best considered separately from the other radiogenic isotope systems Protactinium Thorium 231Pa 230Th edit Uranium is well mixed in the ocean and its decay produces 231Pa and 230Th at a constant activity ratio 0 093 The decay products are rapidly removed by adsorption on settling particles but not at equal rates 231Pa has a residence equivalent to the residence time of deep water in the Atlantic basin around 1000 yrs but 230Th is removed more rapidly centuries Thermohaline circulation effectively exports 231Pa from the Atlantic into the Southern Ocean while most of the 230Th remains in Atlantic sediments As a result there is a relationship between 231Pa 230Th in Atlantic sediments and the rate of overturning faster overturning produces lower sediment 231Pa 230Th ratio while slower overturning increases this ratio The combination of d13C and 231Pa 230Th can therefore provide a more complete insight into past circulation changes Anthropogenic isotopes editTritium helium 3 edit Tritium was released to the atmosphere during atmospheric testing of nuclear bombs Radioactive decay of tritium produces the noble gas helium 3 Comparing the ratio of tritium to helium 3 3H 3He allows estimation of the age of recent ground waters A small amount of Tritium is also produced naturally by cosmic ray spallation and spontaneous ternary fission in natural uranium and thorium but due to the relatively short half life of Tritium and the relatively small quantities compared to those from humandmade sources those sources of Tritium usually play only a secondary role in the analysis of groundwater USGS Tritium Helium 3 Dating Hydrologic Isotope Tracers HeliumSee also editCosmogenic isotopes Environmental isotopes Geochemistry Isotopic signature Radiometric dating Isotope ratio mass spectrometry Sulfur isotope biogeochemistry Urey Bigeleisen Mayer equationNotes edit a b c d Drever James 2002 The Geochemistry of Natural Waters New Jersey Prentice Hall pp 311 322 ISBN 978 0 13 272790 7 a b c USGS Isotope Tracers Resources Isotope Geochemistry Retrieved 2009 01 18 Saltzman Matthew R 2002 Carbon isotope d13C stratigraphy across the Silurian Devonian transition in North America evidence for a perturbation of the global carbon cycle PDF Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 187 1 2 83 100 Bibcode 2002PPP 187 83S doi 10 1016 s0031 0182 02 00510 2 Retrieved 7 Jan 2017 Park S Atlas E L Boering K A 2004 Measurements of N2O isotopologues in the stratosphere Journal of Geophysical Research 109 D1 D01305 Bibcode 2004JGRD 109 1305P doi 10 1029 2003JD003731 S2CID 140545969 a b Brenninkmeijer C A M Janssen C Kaiser J Rockmann T Rhee T S Assonov S S 2003 Isotope effects in the chemistry of atmospheric trace compounds Chemical Reviews 103 12 5125 5161 doi 10 1021 cr020644k PMID 14664646 Mauersberger K 1987 Ozone isotope measurements in the stratosphere Geophysical Research Letters 14 1 80 83 Bibcode 1987GeoRL 14 80M doi 10 1029 GL014i001p00080 Emiliani C Edwards G 1953 Tertiary ocean bottom temperatures Nature 171 4359 887 888 Bibcode 1953Natur 171 887E doi 10 1038 171887c0 S2CID 4239689 Rollinson H R 1993 Using Geochemical Data Evaluation Presentation Interpretation Longman Scientific amp Technical ISBN 978 0 582 06701 1 Drake Henrik Roberts Nick M W Reinhardt Manuel Whitehouse Martin Ivarsson Magnus Karlsson Andreas Kooijman Ellen Kielman Schmitt Melanie 2021 06 03 Biosignatures of ancient microbial life are present across the igneous crust of the Fennoscandian shield Communications Earth amp Environment 2 1 1 13 doi 10 1038 s43247 021 00170 2 ISSN 2662 4435 Dickin A P 2005 Radiogenic Isotope Geology Cambridge University Press Archived from the original on 2014 03 27 Retrieved 2013 10 10 References editGeneral edit Allegre C J 2008 Isotope Geology Cambridge University Press Dickin A P 2005 Radiogenic Isotope Geology Cambridge University Press Faure G Mensing T M 2004 Isotopes Principles and Applications John Wiley amp Sons Hoefs J 2004 Stable Isotope Geochemistry Springer Verlag Sharp Z 2006 Principles of Stable Isotope Geochemistry Prentice Hall Stable isotopes edit Environmental Isotopes University of Ottawa Fundamentals of Isotope Geochemistry C Kendall amp E A Caldwell chap 2 in Isotope Tracers in Catchment Hydrology edited by C Kendall amp J J McDonnell 1998 Stable Isotopes and Mineral Resource Investigations in the United States USGS 3He 4He edit Burnard P G Farley K A Turner G 1998 Multiple fluid pulses in a Samoan harzburgite Chemical Geology 147 1 2 99 114 Bibcode 1998ChGeo 147 99B doi 10 1016 s0009 2541 97 00175 7 Kirstein L Timmerman M 2000 Evidence of the proto Iceland lume in northwestern Ireland at 42Ma from helium isotopes Journal of the Geological Society London 157 5 923 927 Bibcode 2000JGSoc 157 923K doi 10 1144 jgs 157 5 923 S2CID 128600558 Porcelli D Halliday A N 2001 The core as a possible source of mantle helium Earth and Planetary Science Letters 192 1 45 56 Bibcode 2001E amp PSL 192 45P doi 10 1016 s0012 821x 01 00418 6 Re Os edit Arne D Bierlein F P Morgan J W Stein H J 2001 Re Os dating of sulfides associated with gold mineralisation in central Victoria Australia Economic Geology 96 6 1455 1459 doi 10 2113 96 6 1455 Martin C 1991 Osmium isotopic characteristics of mantle derived rocks Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 55 5 1421 1434 Bibcode 1991GeCoA 55 1421M doi 10 1016 0016 7037 91 90318 y External links editNational Isotope Development Center Reference information on isotopes and coordination and management of isotope production availability and distribution Isotope Development amp Production for Research and Applications IDPRA U S Department of Energy program for isotope production and production research and development Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Isotope geochemistry amp oldid 1207306670, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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