کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
6442486 | 1639840 | 2016 | 10 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Quartz ITL and TT-OSL signals were tested for dating of Amazonian sediments.
- TT-OSL and ITL signals of quartz were well bleached in the modern sediments.
- TT-OSL signal showed higher saturation doses and better results to determine burial ages.
- Age uncertainties may result from dose rate changes through time.
- The Xingu River had bottom channel 15-25Â m higher than the current level during the Middle Pleistocene.
The paleogeography of Amazonia lowlands during the Pleistocene remains hampered by the lack of reliable absolute ages to constrain sediment deposition in the hundred thousand to few million years timescales. Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating applied to quartz has provided important chronological control for late Quaternary sediments, but the method is limited to the last â¼150Â ka. In order to extend the age range of luminescence dating, new signals from quartz have been investigated. This study tested the application of isothermal thermoluminescence (ITL) and thermally transferred optically stimulated luminescence (TT-OSL) signals of quartz for dating of fluvial terraces from eastern Amazonia. ITL and TT-OSL signals measured in a modern fluvial sediment sample have shown small residual doses (4 and 16Â Gy), suggesting adequate bleached sediments for the target dose range (>150Â Gy). This sample responded well to dose recovery test, which showed that the ITL and TT-OSL signals grow to higher doses compared to the doses estimated by the conventional OSL signal. The ITL signal saturated for doses significantly lower than doses reported in the literature. Most dating samples were beyond the ITL saturation doses and only TT-OSL signals were suitable to estimate equivalent doses. Burial ages ranging from 107 to 340Â ka were estimated for the fluvial terraces in the lower Xingu River. The main ages uncertainties are related to dose rate changes through time. Despite the uncertainties, these ages should indicate a higher channel base level during the Middle Pleistocene followed by channel incision, possibly due to episodes of increased precipitation in the Xingu watershed.
Journal: Quaternary Geochronology - Volume 36, September 2016, Pages 28-37