Improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period

Recognition of palaeoclimatic instability in the Greenland ice cores has spurred researchers to identify corresponding evidence in other terrestrial records from the last glacial stage. Such evidence is critical for establishing how much environmental stress precipitated Neanderthal and Late Pleisto...

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Main Authors: Briant, R, Brock, F, Demarchi, B, Langford, H, Penkman, K, Schreve, D, Schwenninger, J, Taylor, S
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2017
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author Briant, R
Brock, F
Demarchi, B
Langford, H
Penkman, K
Schreve, D
Schwenninger, J
Taylor, S
author_facet Briant, R
Brock, F
Demarchi, B
Langford, H
Penkman, K
Schreve, D
Schwenninger, J
Taylor, S
author_sort Briant, R
collection OXFORD
description Recognition of palaeoclimatic instability in the Greenland ice cores has spurred researchers to identify corresponding evidence in other terrestrial records from the last glacial stage. Such evidence is critical for establishing how much environmental stress precipitated Neanderthal and Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions, although a need for improved chronology has been consistently highlighted. In formerly glaciated and periglaciated areas of northern Europe, palaeoenvironmental sequences are frequently discontinuous. These often yield high-resolution proxy-based quantitative palaeotemperature estimates but can be hard to date, due to difficulties in removing contamination from biological samples at the limits of the radiocarbon technique (c.30-50kya). Here we demonstrate, for the first time using samples with independent age control, that different radiocarbon pretreatments can generate different age data and that gentler, less effective treatments applied to avoid sample loss may not yield reliable age-estimates. We advocate alternative harsher pretreatment using a strong acid-base-acid protocol. This provides an acceptable balance between contamination removal and excessive sample loss and generates more accurate ages, significantly enhancing our ability to detect and understand the impacts of palaeoclimatic instability in the terrestrial record of the last glacial.
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spelling oxford-uuid:14346f3b-40cd-4755-8b5a-4e82e520d53e2022-03-26T10:18:23ZImproving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial periodJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:14346f3b-40cd-4755-8b5a-4e82e520d53eSymplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2017Briant, RBrock, FDemarchi, BLangford, HPenkman, KSchreve, DSchwenninger, JTaylor, SRecognition of palaeoclimatic instability in the Greenland ice cores has spurred researchers to identify corresponding evidence in other terrestrial records from the last glacial stage. Such evidence is critical for establishing how much environmental stress precipitated Neanderthal and Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions, although a need for improved chronology has been consistently highlighted. In formerly glaciated and periglaciated areas of northern Europe, palaeoenvironmental sequences are frequently discontinuous. These often yield high-resolution proxy-based quantitative palaeotemperature estimates but can be hard to date, due to difficulties in removing contamination from biological samples at the limits of the radiocarbon technique (c.30-50kya). Here we demonstrate, for the first time using samples with independent age control, that different radiocarbon pretreatments can generate different age data and that gentler, less effective treatments applied to avoid sample loss may not yield reliable age-estimates. We advocate alternative harsher pretreatment using a strong acid-base-acid protocol. This provides an acceptable balance between contamination removal and excessive sample loss and generates more accurate ages, significantly enhancing our ability to detect and understand the impacts of palaeoclimatic instability in the terrestrial record of the last glacial.
spellingShingle Briant, R
Brock, F
Demarchi, B
Langford, H
Penkman, K
Schreve, D
Schwenninger, J
Taylor, S
Improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period
title Improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period
title_full Improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period
title_fullStr Improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period
title_full_unstemmed Improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period
title_short Improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period
title_sort improving chronological control for environmental sequences from the last glacial period
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