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Cosmogenic 3He and 21Ne dating of biotite and hornblende
Stable cosmogenic isotopes such as 3He and 21Ne are useful for dating of diverse lithologies, quantifying erosion rates and ages of ancient surfaces and sediments, and for assessing complex burial histories. Although many minerals are potentially suitable targets for 3He and 21Ne dating, complex pro...
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Published in: | Earth and planetary science letters 2012, Vol.313, p.86-94 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Stable cosmogenic isotopes such as
3He and
21Ne are useful for dating of diverse lithologies, quantifying erosion rates and ages of ancient surfaces and sediments, and for assessing complex burial histories. Although many minerals are potentially suitable targets for
3He and
21Ne dating, complex production systematics require calibration of each mineral–isotope pair. We present new results from a drill core in a high-elevation ignimbrite surface, which demonstrates that cosmogenic
3He and
21Ne can be readily measured in biotite and hornblende.
21Ne production rates in hornblende and biotite are similar, and are higher than that in quartz due to production from light elements such as Mg and Al. We measure
21Ne
hbl/
21Ne
qtz
=
1.35
±
0.03 and
21Ne
bio/
21Ne
qtz
=
1.3
±
0.02, which yield production rates of 25.6
±
3.0 and 24.7
±
2.9
at
g
−
1
yr
−
1
relative to a
21Ne
qtz production rate of 19.0
±
1.8
at
g
−
1
yr
−
1
. We show that nucleogenic
21Ne concentrations produced via the reaction
18O(α,n)
21Ne are manageably small in this setting, and we present a new approach to deconvolve nucleogenic
21Ne by comparison to nucleogenic
22Ne produced from the reaction
19F(α,n)
22Ne in F-rich phases such as biotite. Our results show that hornblende is a suitable target phase for cosmogenic
3He dating, but that
3He is lost from biotite at Earth surface temperatures. Comparison of
3He concentrations in hornblende with previously measured mineral phases such as apatite and zircon provides unambiguous evidence for
3He production via the reaction
6Li(n,α)
3H
→
3He. Due to the atypically high Li content in the hornblende (~
160
ppm) we estimate that Li-produced
3He represents ~
40% of total
3He production in our samples, and must be considered on a sample-specific basis if
3He dating in hornblende is to be widely implemented.
► Cosmogenic
3He and
21Ne can be measured in hornblende and biotite. ►
21Ne production rates are ~25.6 and ~24.7
at
g
−
1
yr
−
1
in hornblende and biotite. ► Li-produced
3He accounts for ~
40% of
3He in these Li-rich hornblendes. |
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ISSN: | 0012-821X 1385-013X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.epsl.2011.11.005 |