Dating Rocks and Fossils Using Geologic Methods
Dating Rocks and Fossils Using Geologic Methods
Dating Rocks and Fossils Using Geologic Methods
By: Daniel J. Peppe (Department of Geology, Baylor University) & Alan L. Deino (Berkeley Geochronology Center) © 2013 Nature
Education
Using relative and radiometric dating methods, geologists are able to answer the question: how old is this fossil?
A fossil can be studied to determine what kind of organism it represents, how the organism lived, and how it was preserved.
However, by itself a fossil has little meaning unless it is placed within some context. The age of the fossil must be
determined so it can be compared to other fossil species from the same time period. Understanding the ages of related
fossil species helps scientists piece together the evolutionary history of a group of organisms.
For example, based on the primate fossil record, scientists know that living primates evolved from fossil primates and that
this evolutionary history took tens of millions of years. By comparing fossils of different primate species, scientists can
examine how features changed and how primates evolved through time. However, the age of each fossil primate needs to be
determined so that fossils of the same age found in different parts of the world and fossils of different ages can be
compared.
There are three general approaches that allow scientists to date geological materials and answer the question: "How old is
this fossil?" First, the relative age of a fossil can be determined. Relative dating puts geologic events in chronological order
without requiring that a specific numerical age be assigned to each event. Second, it is possible to determine the numerical
age for fossils or earth materials. Numerical ages estimate the date of a geological event and can sometimes reveal quite
precisely when a fossil species existed in time.
Figure 2: The principles of stratigraphy help us understand the relative age of rock layers.
Layers of rock are deposited horizontally at the bottom of a lake (principle of original horizontality). Younger layers are deposited on top of
older layers (principle of superposition). Layers that cut across other layers are younger than the layers they cut through (principle of
cross-cutting relationships).
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The principle of superposition builds on the principle of original horizontality. The principle of superposition states that in
an undeformed sequence of sedimentary rocks, each layer of rock is older than the one above it and younger than the one
below it (Figures 1 and 2). Accordingly, the oldest rocks in a sequence are at the bottom and the youngest rocks are at the
top.
Sometimes sedimentary rocks are disturbed by events, such as fault movements, that cut across layers after the rocks
were deposited. This is the principle of cross-cutting relationships. The principle states that any geologic features that
cut across strata must have formed after the rocks they cut through (Figures 2 and 3).
Figure 3: The sedimentary rock layers exposed in the cliffs at Zumaia, Spain, are now tilted close to vertical.
According to the principle of original horizontality, these strata must have been deposited horizontally and then titled vertically after they
were deposited. In addition to being tilted horizontally, the layers have been faulted (dashed lines on figure). Applying the principle of
cross-cutting relationships, this fault that offsets the layers of rock must have occurred after the strata were deposited.
© 2013 Nature Education Photo courtesy of Daniel Peppe. All rights reserved.
The principles of original horizontality, superposition, and cross-cutting relationships allow events to be ordered at a single
location. However, they do not reveal the relative ages of rocks preserved in two different areas. In this case, fossils can be
useful tools for understanding the relative ages of rocks. Each fossil species reflects a unique period of time in Earth's
history. The principle of faunal succession states that different fossil species always appear and disappear in the same
order, and that once a fossil species goes extinct, it disappears and cannot reappear in younger rocks (Figure 4).
Most isotopes found on Earth are generally stable and do not change. However some isotopes, like 14C, have an unstable
nucleus and are radioactive. This means that occasionally the unstable isotope will change its number of protons, neutrons, or
both. This change is called radioactive decay. For example, unstable 14C transforms to stable nitrogen (14N). The atomic
nucleus that decays is called the parent isotope. The product of the decay is called the daughter isotope. In the
example, 14C is the parent and 14N is the daughter.
Some minerals in rocks and organic matter (e.g., wood, bones, and shells) can contain radioactive isotopes. The abundances of
parent and daughter isotopes in a sample can be measured and used to determine their age. This method is known as
radiometric dating. Some commonly used dating methods are summarized in Table 1.
The rate of decay for many radioactive isotopes has been measured and does not change over time. Thus, each radioactive
isotope has been decaying at the same rate since it was formed, ticking along regularly like a clock. For example, when
potassium is incorporated into a mineral that forms when lava cools, there is no argon from previous decay (argon, a gas,
escapes into the atmosphere while the lava is still molten). When that mineral forms and the rock cools enough that argon
can no longer escape, the "radiometric clock" starts. Over time, the radioactive isotope of potassium decays slowly into
stable argon, which accumulates in the mineral.
The amount of time that it takes for half of the parent isotope to decay into daughter isotopes is called the half-life of an
isotope (Figure 5b). When the quantities of the parent and daughter isotopes are equal, one half-life has occurred. If the
half life of an isotope is known, the abundance of the parent and daughter isotopes can be measured and the amount of time
that has elapsed since the "radiometric clock" started can be calculated.
For example, if the measured abundance of 14C and 14N in a bone are equal, one half-life has passed and the bone is 5,730
years old (an amount equal to the half-life of 14C). If there is three times less 14C than 14N in the bone, two half lives have
passed and the sample is 11,460 years old. However, if the bone is 70,000 years or older the amount of 14C left in the bone
will be too small to measure accurately. Thus, radiocarbon dating is only useful for measuring things that were formed in the
relatively recent geologic past. Luckily, there are methods, such as the commonly used potassium-argon (K-Ar) method,
that allows dating of materials that are beyond the limit of radiocarbon dating