Back to Search Start Over

IMPLICATIONS OF SINGLE-STEP GRAPHITIZATION FOR RECONSTRUCTING LATE HOLOCENE RELATIVE SEA-LEVEL USING RADIOCARBON-DATED ORGANIC COASTAL SEDIMENT.

Authors :
Sefton, Juliet P
Kemp, Andrew C
Elder, Kathryn L
Hansman, Roberta L
Roberts, Mark L
Source :
Radiocarbon; Oct2022, Vol. 64 Issue 5, p1139-1158, 20p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Late Holocene relative sea-level reconstructions are commonly generated using proxies preserved in salt-marsh and mangrove sediment. These depositional environments provide abundant material for radiocarbon dating in the form of identifiable macrofossils (salt marshes) and bulk organic sediment (mangroves). We explore if single-step graphitization of these samples in preparation for radiocarbon dating can increase the number and temporal resolution of relative sea-level reconstructions without a corresponding increase in cost. Dating of salt-marsh macrofossils from the northeastern United States and bulk mangrove sediment from the Federated States of Micronesia indicates that single-step graphitization generates radiocarbon ages that are indistinguishable from replicates prepared using traditional graphitization, but with a modest increase in error (mean/maximum of 6.25/15 additional <superscript>14</superscript>C yr for salt-marsh macrofossils). Low <superscript>12</superscript>C currents measured on bulk mangrove sediment following single-step graphitization likely render them unreliable despite their apparent accuracy. Simulated chronologies for six salt-marsh cores indicate that having twice as many radiocarbon dates (since single-step graphitization costs ∼50% of traditional graphitization) results in narrower confidence intervals for sample age estimated by age-depth models when the additional error from the single-step method is less than ∼50 <superscript>14</superscript>C yr (∼30 <superscript>14</superscript>C yr if the chronology also utilizes historical age markers). Since these thresholds are greater than our empirical estimates of the additional error, we conclude that adopting single-step graphitization for radiocarbon measurements on plant macrofossils is likely to increase precision of age-depth models by more than 20/10% (without/with historical age markers). This improvement can be implemented without additional cost. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00338222
Volume :
64
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Radiocarbon
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159539665
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2022.55