Chronostratigraphy and Geological Time
Chronostratigraphy and Geological Time
Geologic time units: Stratigraphic units defined and delineated on the basis of time.
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5.2 The geologic time scale
2.Establishing a composite
international chronostratigaphic scale.
Although the systems are accepted by
the international geologic community
as the basic reference sections for
the geologic time scale, considerable
Boggs (2001) controversy still exists regarding the
Cambrian: Derived from the Roman name for Wales (Cambria) exact placement of system
Ordovician: Named for Ordovices, an ancient Welsh tribe that was the last in boundaries and the subdivision3of
Britain to submit to Roman domination.
Silurian: Named for Silures, an ancient tribe that had once inhabited Wales.
some systems.
Nomenclature of Phanerozoic (顯生元)
chronostratigraphic units
Boggs (2001)
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2009 version
5.3 Calibrating the geological time scale
The major tools for finding ages of sediments to calibrate the geologic time scale are relative-age
determinations by use of fossils – biochronology – and absolute age estimates based on isotopic
decay – radiochronology.
The duration of the FADs of many planktonic species may be as little as 10,000 years. The error
caused by an age discrepancy of this magnitude becomes insignificant when applied to
estimation of the ages of rocks that are millions to hundreds of millions of years old. Thus, the
FADs and LADs of may fossil species can be considered essentially synchronous for the
utilitarian purposes of biochronology.
Boggs (2001)
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2. Calibrating by absolute ages: Radiochronology
An isotope is defined as one of two or more atoms that have the same atomic number but which
contain different numbers of neutrons (e.g., strontium: 84Sr, 86Sr, 87Sr, 88Sr). Some isotopes,
known as daughter isotopes, are produced by radioactive decay of another isotope, the parent
isotopes, whilst others are totally stable and their abundance does not change through
geological time (e.g. 87Sr is the daughter isotope of its parent isotope 87Rb (Rubidium), whilst 84Sr,
86Sr, 88Sr are all stable).
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Lamb & Sington (1998)
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Doyle & Bennett (1998)
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U238-Th230 method: ~600,000 yrs for Boggs (2001)
Cave carbonate deposits 11
Radiometric methods
Carbon-14 method (sediments), good for 100 < age < 40,000 years.
Impact of cosmic-ray neutrons on ordinary 14N atoms produces 14C in the atmosphere. 14C
atoms in turn decays backs to 14N. 14C is incorporated into carbon dioxide (CO2), which is
assimilated by plants and animals during their life cycles. The age of a sample is determined
by measuring the amount of radiocarbon per gram of total carbon in a sample and comparing
this with the initial amount at the time the organism died. The age equation is:
where A is the measured activity of the sample at the present moment in disintegrations per
minute per gram of carbon and A0 is the initial activity.
238U decays through several intermediate daughter products, including 234U, to thorium-230.
230Th is an unstable isotope and itself decays with a half-life of 75,000 years to still another
unstable daughter product, radium (鐳)-226. Owing to this fairly rapid decay of 230Th, cores
of sediments taken from ocean floor exhibit a measurable decrease in 230Th content with
increasing depth in the cores. Assuming that sedimentation rates and the rates of
precipitation of 230Th have remained fairly constant through time, the concentration of 230Th
should decrease exponentially with depth. The ages of the sediments at various depths in a
core can be calculated by comparing the amount of remaining 230Th at any depth to the
amount in the top layer of the core (surface sediments). 12
Thorium-230/Protactinium (鏷) -231 ratio method (sediments)
231Pa is the unstable daughter product of 235U. Because 231Pa decays about twice as rapidly
as 230Th, the 231Pa/230Th ratio in the sediments changes with time. The age of sediment with
depth can be determined in a similar manner to the above Thorium-230 method.
Fission-track dating
Counting fission tracks in minerals such as zircon. Emission of charged particles from
decaying nuclei causes disruption of crystal lattices, creating the tracks, which can be seen
and counted under a microscope.
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☆ Dating sedimentary rocks
Types of rocks useful for geochronologic calibration of the geologic time table
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1. Finding ages of sedimentary rocks by analyzing
interbedded “contemporaneous” volcanic rocks
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Dating for sediments of age less than a few hundred years
5730 yrs
30.3 yrs
53 days
22.3 yrs
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From Hu and Su (1999) Marine Geology, 160, 183-196.