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Radiometric dating

Radiometric dating, radioactive dating or radioisotope dating is a technique which is used to date materials such as rocks or carbon, in which trace radioactive impurities were selectively incorporated when they were formed. The method compares the abundance of a naturally occurring radioactive isotope within the material to the abundance of its decay products, which form at a known constant rate of decay.[1] The use of radiometric dating was first published in 1907 by Bertram Boltwood[2] and is now the principal source of information about the absolute age of rocks and other geological features, including the age of fossilized life forms or the age of Earth itself, and can also be used to date a wide range of natural and man-made materials.

Together with stratigraphic principles, radiometric dating methods are used in geochronology to establish the geologic time scale.[3] Among the best-known techniques are radiocarbon dating, potassium–argon dating and uranium–lead dating. By allowing the establishment of geological timescales, it provides a significant source of information about the ages of fossils and the deduced rates of evolutionary change. Radiometric dating is also used to date archaeological materials, including ancient artifacts.

Different methods of radiometric dating vary in the timescale over which they are accurate and the materials to which they can be applied.

Fundamentals

Radioactive decay

 
Example of a radioactive decay chain from lead-212 (212Pb) to lead-208 (208Pb) . Each parent nuclide spontaneously decays into a daughter nuclide (the decay product) via an α decay or a β decay. The final decay product, lead-208 (208Pb), is stable and can no longer undergo spontaneous radioactive decay.

All ordinary matter is made up of combinations of chemical elements, each with its own atomic number, indicating the number of protons in the atomic nucleus. Additionally, elements may exist in different isotopes, with each isotope of an element differing in the number of neutrons in the nucleus. A particular isotope of a particular element is called a nuclide. Some nuclides are inherently unstable. That is, at some point in time, an atom of such a nuclide will undergo radioactive decay and spontaneously transform into a different nuclide. This transformation may be accomplished in a number of different ways, including alpha decay (emission of alpha particles) and beta decay (electron emission, positron emission, or electron capture). Another possibility is spontaneous fission into two or more nuclides.[citation needed]

While the moment in time at which a particular nucleus decays is unpredictable, a collection of atoms of a radioactive nuclide decays exponentially at a rate described by a parameter known as the half-life, usually given in units of years when discussing dating techniques. After one half-life has elapsed, one half of the atoms of the nuclide in question will have decayed into a "daughter" nuclide or decay product. In many cases, the daughter nuclide itself is radioactive, resulting in a decay chain, eventually ending with the formation of a stable (nonradioactive) daughter nuclide; each step in such a chain is characterized by a distinct half-life. In these cases, usually the half-life of interest in radiometric dating is the longest one in the chain, which is the rate-limiting factor in the ultimate transformation of the radioactive nuclide into its stable daughter. Isotopic systems that have been exploited for radiometric dating have half-lives ranging from only about 10 years (e.g., tritium) to over 100 billion years (e.g., samarium-147).[4]

For most radioactive nuclides, the half-life depends solely on nuclear properties and is essentially constant.[5] This is known because decay constants measured by different techniques give consistent values within analytical errors and the ages of the same materials are consistent from one method to another. It is not affected by external factors such as temperature, pressure, chemical environment, or presence of a magnetic or electric field.[6][7][8] The only exceptions are nuclides that decay by the process of electron capture, such as beryllium-7, strontium-85, and zirconium-89, whose decay rate may be affected by local electron density. For all other nuclides, the proportion of the original nuclide to its decay products changes in a predictable way as the original nuclide decays over time.[citation needed]

This predictability allows the relative abundances of related nuclides to be used as a clock to measure the time from the incorporation of the original nuclides into a material to the present. Nature has conveniently provided us with radioactive nuclides that have half-lives which range from considerably longer than the age of the universe, to less than a zeptosecond. This allows one to measure a very wide range of ages. Isotopes with very long half-lives are called "stable isotopes," and isotopes with very short half-lives are known as "extinct isotopes."[citation needed]

Decay constant determination

The radioactive decay constant, the probability that an atom will decay per year, is the solid foundation of the common measurement of radioactivity. The accuracy and precision of the determination of an age (and a nuclide's half-life) depends on the accuracy and precision of the decay constant measurement.[9] The in-growth method is one way of measuring the decay constant of a system, which involves accumulating daughter nuclides. Unfortunately for nuclides with high decay constants (which are useful for dating very old samples), long periods of time (decades) are required to accumulate enough decay products in a single sample to accurately measure them. A faster method involves using particle counters to determine alpha, beta or gamma activity, and then dividing that by the number of radioactive nuclides. However, it is challenging and expensive to accurately determine the number of radioactive nuclides. Alternatively, decay constants can be determined by comparing isotope data for rocks of known age. This method requires at least one of the isotope systems to be very precisely calibrated, such as the Pb-Pb system.[citation needed]

Accuracy of radiometric dating

 
Thermal ionization mass spectrometer used in radiometric dating.

The basic equation of radiometric dating requires that neither the parent nuclide nor the daughter product can enter or leave the material after its formation. The possible confounding effects of contamination of parent and daughter isotopes have to be considered, as do the effects of any loss or gain of such isotopes since the sample was created. It is therefore essential to have as much information as possible about the material being dated and to check for possible signs of alteration.[10] Precision is enhanced if measurements are taken on multiple samples from different locations of the rock body. Alternatively, if several different minerals can be dated from the same sample and are assumed to be formed by the same event and were in equilibrium with the reservoir when they formed, they should form an isochron. This can reduce the problem of contamination. In uranium–lead dating, the concordia diagram is used which also decreases the problem of nuclide loss. Finally, correlation between different isotopic dating methods may be required to confirm the age of a sample. For example, the age of the Amitsoq gneisses from western Greenland was determined to be 3.60 ± 0.05 Ga (billion years ago) using uranium–lead dating and 3.56 ± 0.10 Ga (billion years ago) using lead–lead dating, results that are consistent with each other.[11]: 142–143 

Accurate radiometric dating generally requires that the parent has a long enough half-life that it will be present in significant amounts at the time of measurement (except as described below under "Dating with short-lived extinct radionuclides"), the half-life of the parent is accurately known, and enough of the daughter product is produced to be accurately measured and distinguished from the initial amount of the daughter present in the material. The procedures used to isolate and analyze the parent and daughter nuclides must be precise and accurate. This normally involves isotope-ratio mass spectrometry.[12]

The precision of a dating method depends in part on the half-life of the radioactive isotope involved. For instance, carbon-14 has a half-life of 5,730 years. After an organism has been dead for 60,000 years, so little carbon-14 is left that accurate dating cannot be established. On the other hand, the concentration of carbon-14 falls off so steeply that the age of relatively young remains can be determined precisely to within a few decades.[13]

Closure temperature

The closure temperature or blocking temperature represents the temperature below which the mineral is a closed system for the studied isotopes. If a material that selectively rejects the daughter nuclide is heated above this temperature, any daughter nuclides that have been accumulated over time will be lost through diffusion, resetting the isotopic "clock" to zero. As the mineral cools, the crystal structure begins to form and diffusion of isotopes is less easy. At a certain temperature, the crystal structure has formed sufficiently to prevent diffusion of isotopes. Thus an igneous or metamorphic rock or melt, which is slowly cooling, does not begin to exhibit measurable radioactive decay until it cools below the closure temperature. The age that can be calculated by radiometric dating is thus the time at which the rock or mineral cooled to closure temperature.[14][15] This temperature varies for every mineral and isotopic system, so a system can be closed for one mineral but open for another. Dating of different minerals and/or isotope systems (with differing closure temperatures) within the same rock can therefore enable the tracking of the thermal history of the rock in question with time, and thus the history of metamorphic events may become known in detail. These temperatures are experimentally determined in the lab by artificially resetting sample minerals using a high-temperature furnace. This field is known as thermochronology or thermochronometry.[citation needed]

The age equation

 
Lu-Hf isochrons plotted of meteorite samples. The age is calculated from the slope of the isochron (line) and the original composition from the intercept of the isochron with the y-axis.

The mathematical expression that relates radioactive decay to geologic time is[14][16]

D* = D0 + N(t) (eλt − 1)

where

  • t is age of the sample,
  • D* is number of atoms of the radiogenic daughter isotope in the sample,
  • D0 is number of atoms of the daughter isotope in the original or initial composition,
  • N(t) is number of atoms of the parent isotope in the sample at time t (the present), given by N(t) = N0eλt, and
  • λ is the decay constant of the parent isotope, equal to the inverse of the radioactive half-life of the parent isotope[17] times the natural logarithm of 2.

The equation is most conveniently expressed in terms of the measured quantity N(t) rather than the constant initial value No.[citation needed]

To calculate the age, it is assumed that the system is closed (neither parent nor daughter isotopes have been lost from system), D0 must be either negligible or can be accurately estimated, λ is known to a high precision, and one has accurate and precise measurements of D* and N(t).[citation needed]

The above equation makes use of information on the composition of parent and daughter isotopes at the time the material being tested cooled below its closure temperature. This is well-established for most isotopic systems.[15][18] However, construction of an isochron does not require information on the original compositions, using merely the present ratios of the parent and daughter isotopes to a standard isotope. An isochron plot is used to solve the age equation graphically and calculate the age of the sample and the original composition.[citation needed]

Modern dating methods

Radiometric dating has been carried out since 1905 when it was invented by Ernest Rutherford as a method by which one might determine the age of the Earth. In the century since then the techniques have been greatly improved and expanded.[17] Dating can now be performed on samples as small as a nanogram using a mass spectrometer. The mass spectrometer was invented in the 1940s and began to be used in radiometric dating in the 1950s. It operates by generating a beam of ionized atoms from the sample under test. The ions then travel through a magnetic field, which diverts them into different sampling sensors, known as "Faraday cups", depending on their mass and level of ionization. On impact in the cups, the ions set up a very weak current that can be measured to determine the rate of impacts and the relative concentrations of different atoms in the beams.[citation needed]

Uranium–lead dating method

 
A concordia diagram as used in uranium–lead dating, with data from the Pfunze Belt, Zimbabwe.[19] All the samples show loss of lead isotopes, but the intercept of the errorchron (straight line through the sample points) and the concordia (curve) shows the correct age of the rock.[15]

Uranium–lead radiometric dating involves using uranium-235 or uranium-238 to date a substance's absolute age. This scheme has been refined to the point that the error margin in dates of rocks can be as low as less than two million years in two-and-a-half billion years.[20][21] An error margin of 2–5% has been achieved on younger Mesozoic rocks.[22]

Uranium–lead dating is often performed on the mineral zircon (ZrSiO4), though it can be used on other materials, such as baddeleyite and monazite (see: monazite geochronology).[23] Zircon and baddeleyite incorporate uranium atoms into their crystalline structure as substitutes for zirconium, but strongly reject lead. Zircon has a very high closure temperature, is resistant to mechanical weathering and is very chemically inert. Zircon also forms multiple crystal layers during metamorphic events, which each may record an isotopic age of the event. In situ micro-beam analysis can be achieved via laser ICP-MS or SIMS techniques.[24]

One of its great advantages is that any sample provides two clocks, one based on uranium-235's decay to lead-207 with a half-life of about 700 million years, and one based on uranium-238's decay to lead-206 with a half-life of about 4.5 billion years, providing a built-in crosscheck that allows accurate determination of the age of the sample even if some of the lead has been lost. This can be seen in the concordia diagram, where the samples plot along an errorchron (straight line) which intersects the concordia curve at the age of the sample.[citation needed]

Samarium–neodymium dating method

This involves the alpha decay of 147Sm to 143Nd with a half-life of 1.06 x 1011 years. Accuracy levels of within twenty million years in ages of two-and-a-half billion years are achievable.[25]

Potassium–argon dating method

This involves electron capture or positron decay of potassium-40 to argon-40. Potassium-40 has a half-life of 1.3 billion years, so this method is applicable to the oldest rocks. Radioactive potassium-40 is common in micas, feldspars, and hornblendes, though the closure temperature is fairly low in these materials, about 350 °C (mica) to 500 °C (hornblende).[citation needed]

Rubidium–strontium dating method

This is based on the beta decay of rubidium-87 to strontium-87, with a half-life of 50 billion years. This scheme is used to date old igneous and metamorphic rocks, and has also been used to date lunar samples. Closure temperatures are so high that they are not a concern. Rubidium-strontium dating is not as precise as the uranium-lead method, with errors of 30 to 50 million years for a 3-billion-year-old sample. Application of in situ analysis (Laser-Ablation ICP-MS) within single mineral grains in faults have shown that the Rb-Sr method can be used to decipher episodes of fault movement.[26]

Uranium–thorium dating method

A relatively short-range dating technique is based on the decay of uranium-234 into thorium-230, a substance with a half-life of about 80,000 years. It is accompanied by a sister process, in which uranium-235 decays into protactinium-231, which has a half-life of 32,760 years.[citation needed]

While uranium is water-soluble, thorium and protactinium are not, and so they are selectively precipitated into ocean-floor sediments, from which their ratios are measured. The scheme has a range of several hundred thousand years. A related method is ionium–thorium dating, which measures the ratio of ionium (thorium-230) to thorium-232 in ocean sediment.[citation needed]

Radiocarbon dating method

 
Ale's Stones at Kåseberga, around ten kilometres south east of Ystad, Sweden were dated at 56 CE using the carbon-14 method on organic material found at the site.[27]

Radiocarbon dating is also simply called carbon-14 dating. Carbon-14 is a radioactive isotope of carbon, with a half-life of 5,730 years[28][29] (which is very short compared with the above isotopes), and decays into nitrogen.[30] In other radiometric dating methods, the heavy parent isotopes were produced by nucleosynthesis in supernovas, meaning that any parent isotope with a short half-life should be extinct by now. Carbon-14, though, is continuously created through collisions of neutrons generated by cosmic rays with nitrogen in the upper atmosphere and thus remains at a near-constant level on Earth. The carbon-14 ends up as a trace component in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2).[citation needed]

A carbon-based life form acquires carbon during its lifetime. Plants acquire it through photosynthesis, and animals acquire it from consumption of plants and other animals. When an organism dies, it ceases to take in new carbon-14, and the existing isotope decays with a characteristic half-life (5730 years). The proportion of carbon-14 left when the remains of the organism are examined provides an indication of the time elapsed since its death. This makes carbon-14 an ideal dating method to date the age of bones or the remains of an organism. The carbon-14 dating limit lies around 58,000 to 62,000 years.[31]

The rate of creation of carbon-14 appears to be roughly constant, as cross-checks of carbon-14 dating with other dating methods show it gives consistent results. However, local eruptions of volcanoes or other events that give off large amounts of carbon dioxide can reduce local concentrations of carbon-14 and give inaccurate dates. The releases of carbon dioxide into the biosphere as a consequence of industrialization have also depressed the proportion of carbon-14 by a few percent; conversely, the amount of carbon-14 was increased by above-ground nuclear bomb tests that were conducted into the early 1960s. Also, an increase in the solar wind or the Earth's magnetic field above the current value would depress the amount of carbon-14 created in the atmosphere.[citation needed]

Fission track dating method

 
Apatite crystals are widely used in fission track dating.

This involves inspection of a polished slice of a material to determine the density of "track" markings left in it by the spontaneous fission of uranium-238 impurities. The uranium content of the sample has to be known, but that can be determined by placing a plastic film over the polished slice of the material, and bombarding it with slow neutrons. This causes induced fission of 235U, as opposed to the spontaneous fission of 238U. The fission tracks produced by this process are recorded in the plastic film. The uranium content of the material can then be calculated from the number of tracks and the neutron flux.[citation needed]

This scheme has application over a wide range of geologic dates. For dates up to a few million years micas, tektites (glass fragments from volcanic eruptions), and meteorites are best used. Older materials can be dated using zircon, apatite, titanite, epidote and garnet which have a variable amount of uranium content.[32] Because the fission tracks are healed by temperatures over about 200 °C the technique has limitations as well as benefits. The technique has potential applications for detailing the thermal history of a deposit.[citation needed]

Chlorine-36 dating method

Large amounts of otherwise rare 36Cl (half-life ~300ky) were produced by irradiation of seawater during atmospheric detonations of nuclear weapons between 1952 and 1958. The residence time of 36Cl in the atmosphere is about 1 week. Thus, as an event marker of 1950s water in soil and ground water, 36Cl is also useful for dating waters less than 50 years before the present. 36Cl has seen use in other areas of the geological sciences, including dating ice [33] and sediments.

Luminescence dating methods

Luminescence dating methods are not radiometric dating methods in that they do not rely on abundances of isotopes to calculate age. Instead, they are a consequence of background radiation on certain minerals. Over time, ionizing radiation is absorbed by mineral grains in sediments and archaeological materials such as quartz and potassium feldspar. The radiation causes charge to remain within the grains in structurally unstable "electron traps". Exposure to sunlight or heat releases these charges, effectively "bleaching" the sample and resetting the clock to zero. The trapped charge accumulates over time at a rate determined by the amount of background radiation at the location where the sample was buried. Stimulating these mineral grains using either light (optically stimulated luminescence or infrared stimulated luminescence dating) or heat (thermoluminescence dating) causes a luminescence signal to be emitted as the stored unstable electron energy is released, the intensity of which varies depending on the amount of radiation absorbed during burial and specific properties of the mineral.[citation needed]

These methods can be used to date the age of a sediment layer, as layers deposited on top would prevent the grains from being "bleached" and reset by sunlight. Pottery shards can be dated to the last time they experienced significant heat, generally when they were fired in a kiln.[citation needed]

Other methods

Other methods include:[citation needed]

Dating with decay products of short-lived extinct radionuclides

Absolute radiometric dating requires a measurable fraction of parent nucleus to remain in the sample rock. For rocks dating back to the beginning of the solar system, this requires extremely long-lived parent isotopes, making measurement of such rocks' exact ages imprecise. To be able to distinguish the relative ages of rocks from such old material, and to get a better time resolution than that available from long-lived isotopes, short-lived isotopes that are no longer present in the rock can be used.[35]

At the beginning of the solar system, there were several relatively short-lived radionuclides like 26Al, 60Fe, 53Mn, and 129I present within the solar nebula. These radionuclides—possibly produced by the explosion of a supernova—are extinct today, but their decay products can be detected in very old material, such as that which constitutes meteorites. By measuring the decay products of extinct radionuclides with a mass spectrometer and using isochronplots, it is possible to determine relative ages of different events in the early history of the solar system. Dating methods based on extinct radionuclides can also be calibrated with the U-Pb method to give absolute ages. Thus both the approximate age and a high time resolution can be obtained. Generally a shorter half-life leads to a higher time resolution at the expense of timescale.[citation needed]

The 129I – 129Xe chronometer

129
I
beta-decays to 129
Xe
with a half-life of 16 million years. The iodine-xenon chronometer[36] is an isochron technique. Samples are exposed to neutrons in a nuclear reactor. This converts the only stable isotope of iodine (127
I
) into 128
Xe
via neutron capture followed by beta decay (of 128
I
). After irradiation, samples are heated in a series of steps and the xenon isotopic signature of the gas evolved in each step is analysed. When a consistent 129
Xe
/128
Xe
ratio is observed across several consecutive temperature steps, it can be interpreted as corresponding to a time at which the sample stopped losing xenon.[citation needed]

Samples of a meteorite called Shallowater are usually included in the irradiation to monitor the conversion efficiency from 127
I
to 128
Xe
. The difference between the measured 129
Xe
/128
Xe
ratios of the sample and Shallowater then corresponds to the different ratios of 129
I
/127
I
when they each stopped losing xenon. This in turn corresponds to a difference in age of closure in the early solar system.[citation needed]

The 26Al – 26Mg chronometer

Another example of short-lived extinct radionuclide dating is the 26
Al
26
Mg
chronometer, which can be used to estimate the relative ages of chondrules. 26
Al
decays to 26
Mg
with a half-life of 720 000 years. The dating is simply a question of finding the deviation from the natural abundance of 26
Mg
(the product of 26
Al
decay) in comparison with the ratio of the stable isotopes 27
Al
/24
Mg
.[citation needed]

The excess of 26
Mg
(often designated 26
Mg
*) is found by comparing the 26
Mg
/27
Mg
ratio to that of other Solar System materials.[37]

The 26
Al
26
Mg
chronometer gives an estimate of the time period for formation of primitive meteorites of only a few million years (1.4 million years for Chondrule formation).[38]

A terminology issue

In a July 2022 paper in the journal Applied Geochemistry, the authors proposed that the terms “parent isotope" and "daughter isotope” be avoided in favor of the more descriptive "precursor isotope" and "product isotope", analogous to “precursor ion” and “product ion” in mass spectrometry.[39]

See also

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Further reading

  • Gunten, Hans R. von (1995). "Radioactivity: A Tool to Explore the Past" (PDF). Radiochimica Acta. 70–71 (s1): 305–413. doi:10.1524/ract.1995.7071.special-issue.305. ISSN 2193-3405. S2CID 100441969.
  • Magill, Joseph; Galy, Jean (2005). "Archaeology and Dating". Radioactivity Radionuclides Radiation. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 105–115. Bibcode:2005rrr..book.....M. doi:10.1007/3-540-26881-2_6. ISBN 978-3-540-26881-9.
  • Allègre, Claude J (4 December 2008). Isotope Geology. ISBN 978-0521862288.
  • McSween, Harry Y; Richardson, Steven Mcafee; Uhle, Maria E; Uhle, Professor Maria (2003). Geochemistry: Pathways and Processes (2 ed.). ISBN 978-0-231-12440-9.
  • Harry y. Mcsween, Jr; Huss, Gary R (29 April 2010). Cosmochemistry. ISBN 978-0-521-87862-3.

radiometric, dating, radioactive, dating, radioisotope, dating, technique, which, used, date, materials, such, rocks, carbon, which, trace, radioactive, impurities, were, selectively, incorporated, when, they, were, formed, method, compares, abundance, natural. Radiometric dating radioactive dating or radioisotope dating is a technique which is used to date materials such as rocks or carbon in which trace radioactive impurities were selectively incorporated when they were formed The method compares the abundance of a naturally occurring radioactive isotope within the material to the abundance of its decay products which form at a known constant rate of decay 1 The use of radiometric dating was first published in 1907 by Bertram Boltwood 2 and is now the principal source of information about the absolute age of rocks and other geological features including the age of fossilized life forms or the age of Earth itself and can also be used to date a wide range of natural and man made materials Together with stratigraphic principles radiometric dating methods are used in geochronology to establish the geologic time scale 3 Among the best known techniques are radiocarbon dating potassium argon dating and uranium lead dating By allowing the establishment of geological timescales it provides a significant source of information about the ages of fossils and the deduced rates of evolutionary change Radiometric dating is also used to date archaeological materials including ancient artifacts Different methods of radiometric dating vary in the timescale over which they are accurate and the materials to which they can be applied Contents 1 Fundamentals 1 1 Radioactive decay 1 2 Decay constant determination 1 3 Accuracy of radiometric dating 1 4 Closure temperature 1 5 The age equation 2 Modern dating methods 2 1 Uranium lead dating method 2 2 Samarium neodymium dating method 2 3 Potassium argon dating method 2 4 Rubidium strontium dating method 2 5 Uranium thorium dating method 2 6 Radiocarbon dating method 2 7 Fission track dating method 2 8 Chlorine 36 dating method 2 9 Luminescence dating methods 2 10 Other methods 3 Dating with decay products of short lived extinct radionuclides 3 1 The 129I 129Xe chronometer 3 2 The 26Al 26Mg chronometer 3 3 A terminology issue 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingFundamentals EditRadioactive decay Edit Example of a radioactive decay chain from lead 212 212Pb to lead 208 208Pb Each parent nuclide spontaneously decays into a daughter nuclide the decay product via an a decay or a b decay The final decay product lead 208 208Pb is stable and can no longer undergo spontaneous radioactive decay All ordinary matter is made up of combinations of chemical elements each with its own atomic number indicating the number of protons in the atomic nucleus Additionally elements may exist in different isotopes with each isotope of an element differing in the number of neutrons in the nucleus A particular isotope of a particular element is called a nuclide Some nuclides are inherently unstable That is at some point in time an atom of such a nuclide will undergo radioactive decay and spontaneously transform into a different nuclide This transformation may be accomplished in a number of different ways including alpha decay emission of alpha particles and beta decay electron emission positron emission or electron capture Another possibility is spontaneous fission into two or more nuclides citation needed While the moment in time at which a particular nucleus decays is unpredictable a collection of atoms of a radioactive nuclide decays exponentially at a rate described by a parameter known as the half life usually given in units of years when discussing dating techniques After one half life has elapsed one half of the atoms of the nuclide in question will have decayed into a daughter nuclide or decay product In many cases the daughter nuclide itself is radioactive resulting in a decay chain eventually ending with the formation of a stable nonradioactive daughter nuclide each step in such a chain is characterized by a distinct half life In these cases usually the half life of interest in radiometric dating is the longest one in the chain which is the rate limiting factor in the ultimate transformation of the radioactive nuclide into its stable daughter Isotopic systems that have been exploited for radiometric dating have half lives ranging from only about 10 years e g tritium to over 100 billion years e g samarium 147 4 For most radioactive nuclides the half life depends solely on nuclear properties and is essentially constant 5 This is known because decay constants measured by different techniques give consistent values within analytical errors and the ages of the same materials are consistent from one method to another It is not affected by external factors such as temperature pressure chemical environment or presence of a magnetic or electric field 6 7 8 The only exceptions are nuclides that decay by the process of electron capture such as beryllium 7 strontium 85 and zirconium 89 whose decay rate may be affected by local electron density For all other nuclides the proportion of the original nuclide to its decay products changes in a predictable way as the original nuclide decays over time citation needed This predictability allows the relative abundances of related nuclides to be used as a clock to measure the time from the incorporation of the original nuclides into a material to the present Nature has conveniently provided us with radioactive nuclides that have half lives which range from considerably longer than the age of the universe to less than a zeptosecond This allows one to measure a very wide range of ages Isotopes with very long half lives are called stable isotopes and isotopes with very short half lives are known as extinct isotopes citation needed Decay constant determination Edit See also Radioactive decay law The radioactive decay constant the probability that an atom will decay per year is the solid foundation of the common measurement of radioactivity The accuracy and precision of the determination of an age and a nuclide s half life depends on the accuracy and precision of the decay constant measurement 9 The in growth method is one way of measuring the decay constant of a system which involves accumulating daughter nuclides Unfortunately for nuclides with high decay constants which are useful for dating very old samples long periods of time decades are required to accumulate enough decay products in a single sample to accurately measure them A faster method involves using particle counters to determine alpha beta or gamma activity and then dividing that by the number of radioactive nuclides However it is challenging and expensive to accurately determine the number of radioactive nuclides Alternatively decay constants can be determined by comparing isotope data for rocks of known age This method requires at least one of the isotope systems to be very precisely calibrated such as the Pb Pb system citation needed Accuracy of radiometric dating Edit Thermal ionization mass spectrometer used in radiometric dating The basic equation of radiometric dating requires that neither the parent nuclide nor the daughter product can enter or leave the material after its formation The possible confounding effects of contamination of parent and daughter isotopes have to be considered as do the effects of any loss or gain of such isotopes since the sample was created It is therefore essential to have as much information as possible about the material being dated and to check for possible signs of alteration 10 Precision is enhanced if measurements are taken on multiple samples from different locations of the rock body Alternatively if several different minerals can be dated from the same sample and are assumed to be formed by the same event and were in equilibrium with the reservoir when they formed they should form an isochron This can reduce the problem of contamination In uranium lead dating the concordia diagram is used which also decreases the problem of nuclide loss Finally correlation between different isotopic dating methods may be required to confirm the age of a sample For example the age of the Amitsoq gneisses from western Greenland was determined to be 3 60 0 05 Ga billion years ago using uranium lead dating and 3 56 0 10 Ga billion years ago using lead lead dating results that are consistent with each other 11 142 143 Accurate radiometric dating generally requires that the parent has a long enough half life that it will be present in significant amounts at the time of measurement except as described below under Dating with short lived extinct radionuclides the half life of the parent is accurately known and enough of the daughter product is produced to be accurately measured and distinguished from the initial amount of the daughter present in the material The procedures used to isolate and analyze the parent and daughter nuclides must be precise and accurate This normally involves isotope ratio mass spectrometry 12 The precision of a dating method depends in part on the half life of the radioactive isotope involved For instance carbon 14 has a half life of 5 730 years After an organism has been dead for 60 000 years so little carbon 14 is left that accurate dating cannot be established On the other hand the concentration of carbon 14 falls off so steeply that the age of relatively young remains can be determined precisely to within a few decades 13 Closure temperature Edit Main article Closure temperature The closure temperature or blocking temperature represents the temperature below which the mineral is a closed system for the studied isotopes If a material that selectively rejects the daughter nuclide is heated above this temperature any daughter nuclides that have been accumulated over time will be lost through diffusion resetting the isotopic clock to zero As the mineral cools the crystal structure begins to form and diffusion of isotopes is less easy At a certain temperature the crystal structure has formed sufficiently to prevent diffusion of isotopes Thus an igneous or metamorphic rock or melt which is slowly cooling does not begin to exhibit measurable radioactive decay until it cools below the closure temperature The age that can be calculated by radiometric dating is thus the time at which the rock or mineral cooled to closure temperature 14 15 This temperature varies for every mineral and isotopic system so a system can be closed for one mineral but open for another Dating of different minerals and or isotope systems with differing closure temperatures within the same rock can therefore enable the tracking of the thermal history of the rock in question with time and thus the history of metamorphic events may become known in detail These temperatures are experimentally determined in the lab by artificially resetting sample minerals using a high temperature furnace This field is known as thermochronology or thermochronometry citation needed The age equation Edit Lu Hf isochrons plotted of meteorite samples The age is calculated from the slope of the isochron line and the original composition from the intercept of the isochron with the y axis The mathematical expression that relates radioactive decay to geologic time is 14 16 D D0 N t elt 1 where t is age of the sample D is number of atoms of the radiogenic daughter isotope in the sample D0 is number of atoms of the daughter isotope in the original or initial composition N t is number of atoms of the parent isotope in the sample at time t the present given by N t N0e lt and l is the decay constant of the parent isotope equal to the inverse of the radioactive half life of the parent isotope 17 times the natural logarithm of 2 The equation is most conveniently expressed in terms of the measured quantity N t rather than the constant initial value No citation needed To calculate the age it is assumed that the system is closed neither parent nor daughter isotopes have been lost from system D0 must be either negligible or can be accurately estimated l is known to a high precision and one has accurate and precise measurements of D and N t citation needed The above equation makes use of information on the composition of parent and daughter isotopes at the time the material being tested cooled below its closure temperature This is well established for most isotopic systems 15 18 However construction of an isochron does not require information on the original compositions using merely the present ratios of the parent and daughter isotopes to a standard isotope An isochron plot is used to solve the age equation graphically and calculate the age of the sample and the original composition citation needed Modern dating methods EditRadiometric dating has been carried out since 1905 when it was invented by Ernest Rutherford as a method by which one might determine the age of the Earth In the century since then the techniques have been greatly improved and expanded 17 Dating can now be performed on samples as small as a nanogram using a mass spectrometer The mass spectrometer was invented in the 1940s and began to be used in radiometric dating in the 1950s It operates by generating a beam of ionized atoms from the sample under test The ions then travel through a magnetic field which diverts them into different sampling sensors known as Faraday cups depending on their mass and level of ionization On impact in the cups the ions set up a very weak current that can be measured to determine the rate of impacts and the relative concentrations of different atoms in the beams citation needed Uranium lead dating method Edit Main article Uranium lead dating A concordia diagram as used in uranium lead dating with data from the Pfunze Belt Zimbabwe 19 All the samples show loss of lead isotopes but the intercept of the errorchron straight line through the sample points and the concordia curve shows the correct age of the rock 15 Uranium lead radiometric dating involves using uranium 235 or uranium 238 to date a substance s absolute age This scheme has been refined to the point that the error margin in dates of rocks can be as low as less than two million years in two and a half billion years 20 21 An error margin of 2 5 has been achieved on younger Mesozoic rocks 22 Uranium lead dating is often performed on the mineral zircon ZrSiO4 though it can be used on other materials such as baddeleyite and monazite see monazite geochronology 23 Zircon and baddeleyite incorporate uranium atoms into their crystalline structure as substitutes for zirconium but strongly reject lead Zircon has a very high closure temperature is resistant to mechanical weathering and is very chemically inert Zircon also forms multiple crystal layers during metamorphic events which each may record an isotopic age of the event In situ micro beam analysis can be achieved via laser ICP MS or SIMS techniques 24 One of its great advantages is that any sample provides two clocks one based on uranium 235 s decay to lead 207 with a half life of about 700 million years and one based on uranium 238 s decay to lead 206 with a half life of about 4 5 billion years providing a built in crosscheck that allows accurate determination of the age of the sample even if some of the lead has been lost This can be seen in the concordia diagram where the samples plot along an errorchron straight line which intersects the concordia curve at the age of the sample citation needed Samarium neodymium dating method Edit Main article Samarium neodymium dating This involves the alpha decay of 147Sm to 143Nd with a half life of 1 06 x 1011 years Accuracy levels of within twenty million years in ages of two and a half billion years are achievable 25 Potassium argon dating method Edit Main article Potassium argon dating This involves electron capture or positron decay of potassium 40 to argon 40 Potassium 40 has a half life of 1 3 billion years so this method is applicable to the oldest rocks Radioactive potassium 40 is common in micas feldspars and hornblendes though the closure temperature is fairly low in these materials about 350 C mica to 500 C hornblende citation needed Rubidium strontium dating method Edit Main article Rubidium strontium dating This is based on the beta decay of rubidium 87 to strontium 87 with a half life of 50 billion years This scheme is used to date old igneous and metamorphic rocks and has also been used to date lunar samples Closure temperatures are so high that they are not a concern Rubidium strontium dating is not as precise as the uranium lead method with errors of 30 to 50 million years for a 3 billion year old sample Application of in situ analysis Laser Ablation ICP MS within single mineral grains in faults have shown that the Rb Sr method can be used to decipher episodes of fault movement 26 Uranium thorium dating method Edit Main article Uranium thorium dating A relatively short range dating technique is based on the decay of uranium 234 into thorium 230 a substance with a half life of about 80 000 years It is accompanied by a sister process in which uranium 235 decays into protactinium 231 which has a half life of 32 760 years citation needed While uranium is water soluble thorium and protactinium are not and so they are selectively precipitated into ocean floor sediments from which their ratios are measured The scheme has a range of several hundred thousand years A related method is ionium thorium dating which measures the ratio of ionium thorium 230 to thorium 232 in ocean sediment citation needed Radiocarbon dating method Edit Main article Radiocarbon dating Ale s Stones at Kaseberga around ten kilometres south east of Ystad Sweden were dated at 56 CE using the carbon 14 method on organic material found at the site 27 Radiocarbon dating is also simply called carbon 14 dating Carbon 14 is a radioactive isotope of carbon with a half life of 5 730 years 28 29 which is very short compared with the above isotopes and decays into nitrogen 30 In other radiometric dating methods the heavy parent isotopes were produced by nucleosynthesis in supernovas meaning that any parent isotope with a short half life should be extinct by now Carbon 14 though is continuously created through collisions of neutrons generated by cosmic rays with nitrogen in the upper atmosphere and thus remains at a near constant level on Earth The carbon 14 ends up as a trace component in atmospheric carbon dioxide CO2 citation needed A carbon based life form acquires carbon during its lifetime Plants acquire it through photosynthesis and animals acquire it from consumption of plants and other animals When an organism dies it ceases to take in new carbon 14 and the existing isotope decays with a characteristic half life 5730 years The proportion of carbon 14 left when the remains of the organism are examined provides an indication of the time elapsed since its death This makes carbon 14 an ideal dating method to date the age of bones or the remains of an organism The carbon 14 dating limit lies around 58 000 to 62 000 years 31 The rate of creation of carbon 14 appears to be roughly constant as cross checks of carbon 14 dating with other dating methods show it gives consistent results However local eruptions of volcanoes or other events that give off large amounts of carbon dioxide can reduce local concentrations of carbon 14 and give inaccurate dates The releases of carbon dioxide into the biosphere as a consequence of industrialization have also depressed the proportion of carbon 14 by a few percent conversely the amount of carbon 14 was increased by above ground nuclear bomb tests that were conducted into the early 1960s Also an increase in the solar wind or the Earth s magnetic field above the current value would depress the amount of carbon 14 created in the atmosphere citation needed Fission track dating method Edit Main article fission track dating Apatite crystals are widely used in fission track dating This involves inspection of a polished slice of a material to determine the density of track markings left in it by the spontaneous fission of uranium 238 impurities The uranium content of the sample has to be known but that can be determined by placing a plastic film over the polished slice of the material and bombarding it with slow neutrons This causes induced fission of 235U as opposed to the spontaneous fission of 238U The fission tracks produced by this process are recorded in the plastic film The uranium content of the material can then be calculated from the number of tracks and the neutron flux citation needed This scheme has application over a wide range of geologic dates For dates up to a few million years micas tektites glass fragments from volcanic eruptions and meteorites are best used Older materials can be dated using zircon apatite titanite epidote and garnet which have a variable amount of uranium content 32 Because the fission tracks are healed by temperatures over about 200 C the technique has limitations as well as benefits The technique has potential applications for detailing the thermal history of a deposit citation needed Chlorine 36 dating method Edit Large amounts of otherwise rare 36Cl half life 300ky were produced by irradiation of seawater during atmospheric detonations of nuclear weapons between 1952 and 1958 The residence time of 36Cl in the atmosphere is about 1 week Thus as an event marker of 1950s water in soil and ground water 36Cl is also useful for dating waters less than 50 years before the present 36Cl has seen use in other areas of the geological sciences including dating ice 33 and sediments Luminescence dating methods Edit Main article Luminescence dating Luminescence dating methods are not radiometric dating methods in that they do not rely on abundances of isotopes to calculate age Instead they are a consequence of background radiation on certain minerals Over time ionizing radiation is absorbed by mineral grains in sediments and archaeological materials such as quartz and potassium feldspar The radiation causes charge to remain within the grains in structurally unstable electron traps Exposure to sunlight or heat releases these charges effectively bleaching the sample and resetting the clock to zero The trapped charge accumulates over time at a rate determined by the amount of background radiation at the location where the sample was buried Stimulating these mineral grains using either light optically stimulated luminescence or infrared stimulated luminescence dating or heat thermoluminescence dating causes a luminescence signal to be emitted as the stored unstable electron energy is released the intensity of which varies depending on the amount of radiation absorbed during burial and specific properties of the mineral citation needed These methods can be used to date the age of a sediment layer as layers deposited on top would prevent the grains from being bleached and reset by sunlight Pottery shards can be dated to the last time they experienced significant heat generally when they were fired in a kiln citation needed Other methods Edit Other methods include citation needed Argon argon Ar Ar Iodine xenon I Xe Lanthanum barium La Ba Lead lead Pb Pb Lutetium hafnium Lu Hf Hafnium tungsten dating Hf W Potassium calcium K Ca Rhenium osmium Re Os Uranium uranium U U Krypton krypton Kr Kr Beryllium 10Be 9Be 34 Dating with decay products of short lived extinct radionuclides EditAbsolute radiometric dating requires a measurable fraction of parent nucleus to remain in the sample rock For rocks dating back to the beginning of the solar system this requires extremely long lived parent isotopes making measurement of such rocks exact ages imprecise To be able to distinguish the relative ages of rocks from such old material and to get a better time resolution than that available from long lived isotopes short lived isotopes that are no longer present in the rock can be used 35 At the beginning of the solar system there were several relatively short lived radionuclides like 26Al 60Fe 53Mn and 129I present within the solar nebula These radionuclides possibly produced by the explosion of a supernova are extinct today but their decay products can be detected in very old material such as that which constitutes meteorites By measuring the decay products of extinct radionuclides with a mass spectrometer and using isochronplots it is possible to determine relative ages of different events in the early history of the solar system Dating methods based on extinct radionuclides can also be calibrated with the U Pb method to give absolute ages Thus both the approximate age and a high time resolution can be obtained Generally a shorter half life leads to a higher time resolution at the expense of timescale citation needed The 129I 129Xe chronometer Edit See also Iodine 129 Meteorite age dating 129 I beta decays to 129 Xe with a half life of 16 million years The iodine xenon chronometer 36 is an isochron technique Samples are exposed to neutrons in a nuclear reactor This converts the only stable isotope of iodine 127 I into 128 Xe via neutron capture followed by beta decay of 128 I After irradiation samples are heated in a series of steps and the xenon isotopic signature of the gas evolved in each step is analysed When a consistent 129 Xe 128 Xe ratio is observed across several consecutive temperature steps it can be interpreted as corresponding to a time at which the sample stopped losing xenon citation needed Samples of a meteorite called Shallowater are usually included in the irradiation to monitor the conversion efficiency from 127 I to 128 Xe The difference between the measured 129 Xe 128 Xe ratios of the sample and Shallowater then corresponds to the different ratios of 129 I 127 I when they each stopped losing xenon This in turn corresponds to a difference in age of closure in the early solar system citation needed The 26Al 26Mg chronometer Edit Another example of short lived extinct radionuclide dating is the 26 Al 26 Mg chronometer which can be used to estimate the relative ages of chondrules 26 Al decays to 26 Mg with a half life of 720 000 years The dating is simply a question of finding the deviation from the natural abundance of 26 Mg the product of 26 Al decay in comparison with the ratio of the stable isotopes 27 Al 24 Mg citation needed The excess of 26 Mg often designated 26 Mg is found by comparing the 26 Mg 27 Mg ratio to that of other Solar System materials 37 The 26 Al 26 Mg chronometer gives an estimate of the time period for formation of primitive meteorites of only a few million years 1 4 million years for Chondrule formation 38 A terminology issue Edit In a July 2022 paper in the journal Applied Geochemistry the authors proposed that the terms parent isotope and daughter isotope be avoided in favor of the more descriptive precursor isotope and product isotope analogous to precursor ion and product ion in mass spectrometry 39 See also Edit Earth sciences portal Geophysics portal Physics portalHadean zircon Isotope 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Bibcode 2002AnGeo 20 115V doi 10 5194 angeo 20 115 2002 Carbon 14 Dating www chem uwec edu Retrieved 6 April 2016 Plastino Wolfango Lauri Kaihola Paolo Bartolomei Francesco Bella 2001 Cosmic background reduction in the radiocarbon measurement by scintillation spectrometry at the underground laboratory of Gran Sasso PDF Radiocarbon 43 2A 157 161 doi 10 1017 S0033822200037954 Jacobs J R J Thomas August 2001 A titanite fission track profile across the southeastern Archaean Kaapvaal Craton and the Mesoproterozoic Natal Metamorphic Province South Africa evidence for differential cryptic Meso to Neoproterozoic tectonism Journal of African Earth Sciences 33 2 323 333 Bibcode 2001JAfES 33 323J doi 10 1016 S0899 5362 01 80066 X Willerslev E 2007 Ancient biomolecules from deep ice cores reveal a forested southern Greenland Science 317 5834 111 114 Bibcode 2007Sci 317 111W doi 10 1126 science 1141758 PMC 2694912 PMID 17615355 S2CID 7423309 Application of the authigenic 10 Be 9 Be dating method to Late Miocene Pliocene sequences in the northern Danube Basin Michal Sujan Global and Planetary Change 137 2016 35 53 pdf Imke de Pater and Jack J Lissauer Planetary Sciences page 321 Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 0 521 48219 4 Gilmour J D O V Pravdivtseva A Busfield C M Hohenberg 2006 The I Xe Chronometer and the Early Solar System Meteoritics and Planetary Science 41 1 19 31 Bibcode 2006M amp PS 41 19G doi 10 1111 j 1945 5100 2006 tb00190 x Alexander N Krot 2002 Dating the Earliest Solids in our Solar System Hawai i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology http www psrd hawaii edu Sept02 isotopicAges html Imke de Pater and Jack J Lissauer Planetary Sciences page 322 Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 0 521 48219 4 Pourret Olivier Johannesson Karen July 2022 Radiogenic isotope Not just about words Applied Geochemistry 142 105348 Bibcode 2022ApGC 142j5348P doi 10 1016 j apgeochem 2022 105348 S2CID 248907159 Retrieved 23 July 2022 Further reading EditGunten Hans R von 1995 Radioactivity A Tool to Explore the Past PDF Radiochimica Acta 70 71 s1 305 413 doi 10 1524 ract 1995 7071 special issue 305 ISSN 2193 3405 S2CID 100441969 Magill Joseph Galy Jean 2005 Archaeology and Dating Radioactivity Radionuclides Radiation Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 105 115 Bibcode 2005rrr book M doi 10 1007 3 540 26881 2 6 ISBN 978 3 540 26881 9 Allegre Claude J 4 December 2008 Isotope Geology ISBN 978 0521862288 McSween Harry Y Richardson Steven Mcafee Uhle Maria E Uhle Professor Maria 2003 Geochemistry Pathways and Processes 2 ed ISBN 978 0 231 12440 9 Harry y Mcsween Jr Huss Gary R 29 April 2010 Cosmochemistry ISBN 978 0 521 87862 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radiometric dating amp oldid 1136965806, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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