B. Lougheed, P. Ascough, A. Dolman, L. Löwemark, B. Metcalfe
{"title":"Re-evaluating 14C dating accuracy in deep-sea sediment archives","authors":"B. Lougheed, P. Ascough, A. Dolman, L. Löwemark, B. Metcalfe","doi":"10.31223/osf.io/cwqsk","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract. The current geochronological state of the art for applying the radiocarbon\n(14C) method to deep-sea sediment archives lacks key information on\nsediment bioturbation. Here, we apply a sediment accumulation model that\nsimulates the sedimentation and bioturbation of millions of foraminifera,\nwhereby realistic 14C activities (i.e. from a 14C calibration\ncurve) are assigned to each single foraminifera based on its simulation\ntime step. We find that the normal distribution of 14C age typically\nused to represent discrete-depth sediment intervals (based on the reported\nlaboratory 14C age and measurement error) is unlikely to be a faithful\nreflection of the actual 14C age distribution for a specific depth\ninterval. We also find that this deviation from the actual 14C age\ndistribution is greatly amplified during the calibration process.\nSpecifically, we find a systematic underestimation of total geochronological\nerror in many cases (by up to thousands of years), as well as the generation\nof age–depth artefacts in downcore calibrated median age. Even in the case\nof “perfect” simulated sediment archive scenarios, whereby sediment\naccumulation rate (SAR), bioturbation depth, reservoir age and species\nabundance are all kept constant, the 14C measurement and calibration\nprocesses generate temporally dynamic median age–depth artefacts on the\norder of hundreds of years – whereby even high SAR scenarios (40 and 60 cm kyr−1) are susceptible. Such age–depth artefacts\ncan be especially pronounced during periods corresponding to dynamic changes\nin the Earth's Δ14C history, when single foraminifera of varying\n14C activity can be incorporated into single discrete-depth sediment\nintervals. For certain lower-SAR scenarios, we find that downcore\ndiscrete-depth true median age can systematically fall outside the calibrated\nage range predicted by the 14C measurement and calibration processes,\nthus leading to systematically inaccurate age estimations. In short, our\nfindings suggest the possibility of 14C-derived age–depth artefacts in\nthe literature. Furthermore, since such age–depth artefacts are likely to\ncoincide with large-scale changes in global Δ14C, which\nthemselves can coincide with large-scale changes in global climate (such as\nthe last deglaciation), 14C-derived age–depth artefacts may have been\npreviously incorrectly attributed to changes in SAR coinciding with global\nclimate. Our study highlights the need for the development of improved\ndeep-sea sediment 14C calibration techniques that include an a priori\nrepresentation of bioturbation for multi-specimen samples.\n","PeriodicalId":12723,"journal":{"name":"Geochronology","volume":"45 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2019-09-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"8","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Geochronology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/cwqsk","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 8
Abstract
Abstract. The current geochronological state of the art for applying the radiocarbon
(14C) method to deep-sea sediment archives lacks key information on
sediment bioturbation. Here, we apply a sediment accumulation model that
simulates the sedimentation and bioturbation of millions of foraminifera,
whereby realistic 14C activities (i.e. from a 14C calibration
curve) are assigned to each single foraminifera based on its simulation
time step. We find that the normal distribution of 14C age typically
used to represent discrete-depth sediment intervals (based on the reported
laboratory 14C age and measurement error) is unlikely to be a faithful
reflection of the actual 14C age distribution for a specific depth
interval. We also find that this deviation from the actual 14C age
distribution is greatly amplified during the calibration process.
Specifically, we find a systematic underestimation of total geochronological
error in many cases (by up to thousands of years), as well as the generation
of age–depth artefacts in downcore calibrated median age. Even in the case
of “perfect” simulated sediment archive scenarios, whereby sediment
accumulation rate (SAR), bioturbation depth, reservoir age and species
abundance are all kept constant, the 14C measurement and calibration
processes generate temporally dynamic median age–depth artefacts on the
order of hundreds of years – whereby even high SAR scenarios (40 and 60 cm kyr−1) are susceptible. Such age–depth artefacts
can be especially pronounced during periods corresponding to dynamic changes
in the Earth's Δ14C history, when single foraminifera of varying
14C activity can be incorporated into single discrete-depth sediment
intervals. For certain lower-SAR scenarios, we find that downcore
discrete-depth true median age can systematically fall outside the calibrated
age range predicted by the 14C measurement and calibration processes,
thus leading to systematically inaccurate age estimations. In short, our
findings suggest the possibility of 14C-derived age–depth artefacts in
the literature. Furthermore, since such age–depth artefacts are likely to
coincide with large-scale changes in global Δ14C, which
themselves can coincide with large-scale changes in global climate (such as
the last deglaciation), 14C-derived age–depth artefacts may have been
previously incorrectly attributed to changes in SAR coinciding with global
climate. Our study highlights the need for the development of improved
deep-sea sediment 14C calibration techniques that include an a priori
representation of bioturbation for multi-specimen samples.
摘要目前在深海沉积物档案中应用放射性碳(14C)方法的地质年代学水平缺乏沉积物生物扰动的关键信息。在这里,我们应用了一个沉积物堆积模型,模拟了数百万有孔虫的沉积和生物扰动,根据其模拟时间步长,将现实的14C活动(即来自14C校准曲线)分配给每个单个有孔虫。我们发现,通常用于表示离散深度沉积物间隔的14C年龄的正态分布(基于报告的实验室14C年龄和测量误差)不太可能忠实地反映特定深度间隔的实际14C年龄分布。我们还发现,在校准过程中,这种与实际14C年龄分布的偏差被大大放大。具体来说,我们发现在许多情况下,系统地低估了总地质年代学误差(高达数千年),以及在下核校准的中位年龄中产生的年龄深度伪影。即使在“完美”模拟沉积物档案情景的情况下,沉积累积率(SAR)、生物扰动深度、水库年龄和物种丰度都保持不变,14C测量和校准过程也会产生数百年的时间动态中位年龄深度人工制品,因此即使是高SAR情景(40和60 cm kyr−1)也容易受到影响。在与地球Δ14C历史的动态变化相对应的时期,这种年龄深度的人工制品尤其明显,当时不同的14c活动的单个有孔虫可以合并到单个离散深度的沉积区间中。对于某些低sar情景,我们发现下离散深度的真实年龄中位数可能系统性地落在14C测量和校准过程预测的校准年龄范围之外,从而导致系统地不准确的年龄估计。简而言之,我们的研究结果表明,文献中可能存在14c衍生的年龄深度人工制品。此外,由于这种年龄深度人工制品很可能与全球Δ14C的大尺度变化相吻合,而全球Δ14C的大尺度变化本身也可能与全球气候的大尺度变化相吻合(如最后一次消冰期),因此,14c衍生的年龄深度人工制品以前可能被错误地归因于与全球气候相吻合的SAR变化。我们的研究强调了开发改进的深海沉积物14C校准技术的必要性,其中包括对多样品样品的生物扰动的优先表示。