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Cosmogenic 36 Cl accumulation in unstable landforms: 1. Effects of the thermal neutron distribution

Cosmogenic nuclides produced in situ within minerals at the surface of the Earth are proving to be an effective means of assessing geomorphic histories. The use of multiple cosmogenic nuclides permits both exposure times and erosion rates to be determined. However, if two nuclides are produced only...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Water resources research 1994-11, Vol.30 (11), p.3115-3125
Main Authors: Liu, Beiling, Phillips, Fred M., Fabryka‐Martin, June T., Fowler, Malcolm M., Stone, William D.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Cosmogenic nuclides produced in situ within minerals at the surface of the Earth are proving to be an effective means of assessing geomorphic histories. The use of multiple cosmogenic nuclides permits both exposure times and erosion rates to be determined. However, if two nuclides are produced only by spallation reactions, the systematic differences in their accumulation rates depend only on the differences in their production rates and half‐lives. The relatively small differences that result require a high degree of analytical precision to yield useful results. In contrast to other spallogenic nuclides, 36 Cl is also produced by low‐energy neutron absorption, which creates a different pattern of production as a function of depth. We have measured the thermal flux with depth in a concrete block using 3 He‐filled neutron detectors. The measured thermal neutron profile agrees well with predictions from a simple diffusion‐ based thermal neutron distribution model. Calculations of 36 Cl production using the model suggest that the use of 36 Cl along with a purely spallogenic nuclide to determine erosion rates and exposure times should be less sensitive to analytical error than are determinations from two purely spallogenic nuclides.
ISSN:0043-1397
1944-7973
DOI:10.1029/94WR00761