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Stepped-combustion 14C dating of bomb carbon in lake sediment

January 1, 2004

In this study, we applied a stepped-combustion approach to dating post-bomb lake sediment from north-central Mississippi. Samples were combusted at a low temperature (400 °) and then at 900 °. The CO2 was collected separately for both combustions and analyzed. The goal of this work was to develop a methodology to improve the accuracy of 14C dating of sediment by combusting at a lower temperature and reducing the amount of reworked carbon bound to clay minerals in the sample material. The 14C fraction modern results for the low and high temperature fractions of these sediments were compared with well-defined 137Cs determinations made on sediment taken from the same cores. Comparison of “bomb curves” for 14C and 137Cs indicate that low temperature combustion of sediment improved the accuracy of 14C dating of the sediment. However, fraction modern results for the low temperature fractions were depressed compared to atmospheric values for the same time frame, possibly the result of carbon mixing and the low sedimentation rate in the lake system.

Publication Year 2004
Title Stepped-combustion 14C dating of bomb carbon in lake sediment
DOI 10.1017/S0033822200035931
Authors J. McGeehin, G. S. Burr, G. Hodgins, S. J. Bennett, J. A. Robbins, N. Morehead, H. Markewich
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Radiocarbon
Index ID 70026487
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse