Age Determination of Carboniferous Basic Rocks of Shropshire and Colonsay

1941 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Urry ◽  
Arthur Holmes

The helium method of determining the ages of fine-grained basic igneous rocks has now been so far developed as to be applicable to various geological and petrological problems, particularly where geological periods are involved, as in the problem here discussed. For details of the history of this development up to the beginning of 1937 reference may be made to Holmes, 1931; Urry, 1933; Lane and Urry, 1935; Urry, 1936 (b); Holmes and Paneth, 1936; and Holmes, 1937. During 1937 it was found that many of the helium-ratios on which the ‘helium’ time-scale had been based were too high, because of a previously unsuspected error in radium determination due to reliance having being placed on a radium standard which was seriously at fault. To clear up this embarrassing situation an immediate effort was made by several investigators in collaboration, and the first fruits of their work have recently become available (Evans, Goodman, Keevil, Lane, and Urry, 1939).

2011 ◽  
Vol 149 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
HUAIYU HE ◽  
JIMIN SUN ◽  
QIULI LI ◽  
RIXIANG ZHU

AbstractKnowing when the Tibetan Plateau reached its present elevation is important for understanding the uplift history of Tibet. Recently, Rowley & Currie (2006) suggested that central Tibet exceeded 4000 m from 35 Ma to the Pliocene using the oxygen-isotope composition of calcareous minerals in Lunpola basin sediments. However, they adopted a poor age assignment for the Dingqing Formation in the Lunpola basin based on previous microfossil studies. In this study, we present SIMS U–Pb zircon dates from a bentonite layer intercalated within the middle to lower Dingqing Formation. Twenty-six measurements yield a highly reliable U–Pb age of 23.5 ± 0.2 Ma (2σ, MSWD = 1.1), suggesting that the deposition age of the Dingqing Formation is late Oligocene to early Miocene, much older than the Miocene–Pliocene age used by Rowley & Currie (2006). This age robustly constrains the age of Cenozoic sedimentary strata in central Tibet, and hence provides an important basis for estimating the palaeoelevation in the high Tibet during the geological past.


2008 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hai-Tao Zhang ◽  
F. R. Zhu ◽  
J. Xu ◽  
Y. H. Dai ◽  
D. M. Li ◽  
...  

SummaryAge is a key parameter to deduce the history of a plutonium material. An experimental method using both alpha spectrometry and thermal ionization mass spectrometry has been developed for the age determination of plutonium material. This method is based on the parent/daughter pair


1967 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. E. Odell

In his splendid volume Geology of the Himalayas (1964; reviewed in this Number, p. 86), Professor Augusto Gansser refers (p. 164) to the rock specimens brought back from the summit of Mount Everest by the successful Swiss climbers in 1956, and also by the American team in 1963. All the various summit specimens, Professor Gansser states, are lithologically quite identical. They consist of fine-grained, thin-bedded grey calc-schists or platy limestones. The calcites are elongated conformably with the schistosity, which seems to parallel the bedding. The detrital grains are mostly quartz, acid plagioclases and some microline, together with fine sericite lamellae, paralleling the calcites. Gansser continues: “Of special interest is the fact that both samples contain crinoidal fragments. Their large uniform calcite crystals contrast with the otherwise much finer crystalline matrix. In one elongated stem-fragment the segmentation is visible (Photo. 46), while one small plate still shows the well-preserved perforation (Photo. 47).” Moreover, he observes: “These remnants, representing the highest fossils in the world, are unfortunately not sufficiently well-preserved to allow an age-determination of the top Everest limestone. They do, however, support rather than contradict the Carboniferous (to Lower Permian) age generally assigned to the Everest limestones, on the grounds that they are overlain by the (Upper) Permian Lachi Series (Odell, 1943; Wager, 1939).”


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Lai Kwan Denise Tang

<p>Hong Kong represents a microcosm of the magmatic and tectonic processes that are related to formation of the Southeast China Magmatic Belt (SCMB, ~1,300 km long by 400 km wide). The SCMB is dominated by extensive Mesozoic (Yanshanian Orogeny) igneous rocks, which form part of an extensive, long-lived circum-Pacific igneous province. In Hong Kong, large silicic ignimbrites, produced from several calderas identified through geological mapping, together with their sub-volcanic plutons record a ~26-Myr period of magmatic activities from ~164 to 138 Ma. This work studies these volcanic-plutonic assemblages with the associated Lantau and High Island caldera complexes, with an emphasis on the ~143-138 Ma period from the latter complex. This study uses multiple techniques, including field studies, zircon geochronology and trace element analyses, and zircon and apatite low-temperature thermochronology, to gain new insights into the Mesozoic tectono-magmatic history in this region.  Field studies demonstrate that the High Island caldera complex (with its main collapse at 140.9±0.4 Ma in association with the High Island Tuff) is structurally more complex than previously suggested and represents a long-lived, large (320 km²) feature. The volcanic strata exposed in the eastern part of the caldera are inferred to have been tilted during syneruptive, asymmetric collapse of the caldera floor, whereas those in other parts have been affected by block faulting but not overall tilting. Two ignimbrites (e.g. Long Harbour: 141.4±1.0 Ma) exposed within the caldera outline are now interpreted to have accumulated in local volcano-tectonic basins, confined by faults that were later exploited by dyke intrusions. Field observations offer important constraints on the ages of volcanic and plutonic units, which have been tested by zircon U-Pb dating in this study. The field evidence also negates a previous interpretation that there was an overall tilting of the High Island caldera complex.  U-Pb dating and trace element analyses using secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) techniques have been carried out on zircons separated from 21 samples, chosen from both volcanic and plutonic samples within the Lantau and High Island Caldera complexes. The SIMS age datasets reveal two groups: (1) seven samples with unimodal age spectra; and (2) fourteen samples yielding multiple age components. Five samples in group 1 yield mean ages indistinguishable from their previously published ID-TIMS ages, demonstrating that the SIMS techniques have generated results fully in agreement with the ID-TIMS methods, although with overall less precision. Of the two other samples, one is slightly younger than the published ID-TIMS age, and the other has no previous age determination. Thirteen samples in group 2 are interpreted to have crystallisation/eruption ages that are younger (although often within 2.s.d. uncertainties) than their corresponding ID-TIMS values. The remaining sample from this group has no previous age determination. The overall age patterns from both groups suggest that, instead of separate phases of activity at ~143 and 141-140 Ma as previously inferred, magmatic and volcanic activities were continuous (within age analytical uncertainties) over a ~5 Myr period. Direct linkages between several plutonic and volcanic units in this period of activity (e.g. High Island Tuff and the Kowloon Granite) are no longer supported by the age data, and magmatic activity represented by exposed plutons continued until 137.8±0.8 Ma, as with the Mount Butler Granite.  Under CL imagery, a wide variety of zircon textures is evident, indicative of complex processes that operated in the magmatic systems. Zircon trace element data coupled with textural characteristics enable identification of some common petrogenetic processes. Overall, the intra-grain (cores-rims, sector-zoned zircons) and intra-sample variations in trace element abundance and elemental ratios are more significant than the differences between individual samples. Zircon chemistries in samples from both the volcanic and plutonic records indicate that there are two groups of volcanic-plutonic products through the history of the High Island Caldera magmatic system. Two evolutionary models are proposed here to explain these two groups. In the first model, the magmatic system comprises a single domain that fluctuated in temperature through varying inputs of hotter melts (and was randomly tapped). In the second model the intrusive and extrusive products represent interplay of two magmatic domains in the crust, with contrasting characteristics.  Zircon and apatite fission track analyses have been carried out on several of the rocks dated by U-Pb methods (either SIMS or TIMS), together with a selection of other Mesozoic igneous rocks and post-magmatic Cretaceous and Eocene sediments to cover the geographic area of Hong Kong. The fission-track dataset and associated thermal modelling show that the igneous rocks and Cretaceous sediments (but not the Eocene sediments) together experienced post-emplacement or post-depositional heating to >250 ºC, subsequently cooling through 120-60 ºC after ~80 Ma. The heating reflects the combined effects of an enhanced geothermal gradient and burial. The enhanced geothermal gradient is interpreted to represent continuing Yanshanian magmatic activity at depth, without any documented surface eruption products, until ~100-80 Ma. The data also indicate a long-term, slow cooling (~1 ºC/Myr) since the early Cenozoic, linked to ~2-3 km of erosion-driven exhumation. The thermo-tectonic history of Hong Kong reflects the mid-Cretaceous transition of southeast China from an active to a passive margin bordered by marginal basins that formed in the early Cenozoic. The inferred cessation of magmatism at depth below Hong Kong at ~100-80 Ma is broadly coincident with the cessation of plutonic activity in many other circum-Pacific magmatic provinces related to reorganisation of Pacific Plate motion.</p>


2009 ◽  
Vol 97 (4-5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus Mayer ◽  
Maria Wallenius ◽  
M. Hedberg ◽  
Klaus Lützenkirchen

AbstractIllicit incidents involving nuclear or other radioactive materials and the threat of nuclear terrorism are reasons for serious concern. Since 1993 more than 1300 incidents have been reported to the IAEA Illicit Trafficking Database. Only a small number of cases involve plutonium or plutonium containing materials. However, these cases are attributed particular attention in view of the proliferation aspects and of the radiotoxicity associated with plutonium. Efforts focus on prevention, detection and response to cases of illicit trafficking of nuclear material. If the place of theft or diversion of the material can be identified, then measures of safeguards and physical protection can be implemented to prevent future thefts.Nuclear Forensic Science aims at providing clues on the origin and intended use of nuclear or other radioactive material involved in illicit incidents. The paper provides a brief description of the nuclear forensic methodology and describes in detail the challenges associated with age determination of plutonium materials.


2000 ◽  
Vol 177 ◽  
pp. 631-632
Author(s):  
J. Antipova ◽  
Ene Ergma ◽  
M. J. Sarna

It is accepted that the formation of a millisecond binary pulsar (MBP) with a low–mass companion may be explained as the end–point of close binary evolution in which an old pulsar is spun–up by accretion from the red giant (Bhattacharaya &amp; van den Heuvel 1991). In this paper we shall discuss the cooling properties of the helium white dwarfs (WD) in short orbital period MBP systems PSR J0437–4715, PSR J0751+1807 and PSR J1012+5307, without referring to the rotational history of neutron stars (NS).Below we discuss observational data for several system for which the results of our calculations (Sarna, Antipova, &amp; Muslimov 1998; Sarna, Ergma, &amp; Antipova 1999) may be applied, by taking into account the orbital parameters of the system, the pulsar spin-down time, and the WD cooling time-scale.


Author(s):  
A. F. Smethurst

Numerous veins and veinlets of epidosite traverse the crystalline schists and associated igneous rocks of the Malvern complex. They art fine-grained, compact rocks, of uniform texture and pale greenish-yellow colour, and vary in composition from almost pure epidote to mixtures of epidote with small quantities of quartz, sphene, sericitic mica, apatite, and, in almost insignificant amount, albite.Analytical investigation of these rocks revealed the fact that the epidote they contain holds its water more tenaciously than has hitherto been suspected : the determination of water-content by the methods usually applied to the analysis of rocks and minerals gave results which were so seriously low as to suggest that the mineral was essentially anhydrous. Though more drastic methods increased the yield considerably, they failed to liberate more than about 75 % of the amount of water which, theoretically, should be present.


Author(s):  
Feiko Kalsbeek

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Kalsbeek, F. (1997). Age determination of Precambrian rocks from Greenland: past and present. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 176, 55-59. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v176.5062 _______________ Age determination is an essential part of many geological investigations. The ages of Phanerozoic sedimentary rocks are typically determined by palaeontological studies (often with high precision), but for Precambrian rocks as well as for younger igneous intrusions, precise ages can only be obtained by isotopic analysis of minerals or rocks. Isotopic (radiometric) age determination of Greenland rocks began in the early 1960s and has continued since with gradually improving methods. In this contribution, the development of geochronological knowledge of the Precambrian of Greenland is described in historical perspective, and an outline of new results is given. The history of geochronology can be roughly divided into three periods: 1) a period of single-sample K-Ar and Rb-Sr mineral or whole-rock age determinations; 2) a time when most ages were determined with the help of Rb-Sr and Pb-Pb whole-rock isochrons and multi-grain zircon U-Pb isotope data; 3) the present, where ‘single’ zircon U-Pb data are the preferred method to obtain rock ages. These stages in the development of radiometric dating methods partly overlap in time, and each has yielded very significant contributions to the knowledge of Precambrian evolution in Greenland.


2013 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 152-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qin Zhou ◽  
Qing-Zhu Yin ◽  
Edward D. Young ◽  
Xian-Hua Li ◽  
Fu-Yuan Wu ◽  
...  

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