Amino acid age estimates of marine terraces and sea levels on San Nicolas Island, California

Geology ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel R. Muhs
1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 322-341 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel R. Muhs

Global sea-level changes are expressed in the coastal landforms and deposits of northern San Clemente Island. Stratigraphic, radiometric, amino acid, and pedologic dating techniques have allowed the development of a chronology of sea-level changes for about the last 500,000 yr. A uranium-series date on coral of about 127,000 yr for the 2nd terrace serves as a calibration point for amino acid age estimates of four other mapped terraces. Two of these terraces have age estimates of about 80,000–105,000 yr, another has an age estimate of about 127,000 yr, and the 5th terrace on the west side of the island is estimated to be about 415,000–575,000 yr old. These dates correlate reasonably well with marine terraces dated elsewhere and with stages of the oxygen-isotope record that are thought to represent high stands of the sea. Weakly cemented calcareous dune sands (eolianites) are moderately extensive on northern San Clemente Island and appear to represent low stands of the sea, since calcareous shelf sands were the most likely source. A radiocarbon date of about 22,000 yr suggests that the youngest eolianite was deposited during the last glacial maximum. An older eolianite is estimated to be about 140,000–195,000 yr old based on stratigraphic relations and degree of soil development. The suggested ages for the eolianites also correlate well with oxygen-isotope estimates of low sea levels.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 4085-4122 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Bolshiyanov ◽  
A. Makarov ◽  
L. Savelieva

Abstract. The Lena River Delta, the largest delta of the Arctic Ocean, differs from other deltas because it consists mainly of organomineral sediments, commonly called peat, that contain a huge organic carbon reservoir. The analysis of Delta sediment radiocarbon ages showed that they could not have formed as peat during floodplain bogging, but accumulated when Laptev Sea water level was high and green mosses and sedges grew and were deposited on the surface of flooded marshes. The Lena River Delta formed as organomineral masses and layered sediments accumulated during transgressive phases when sea level rose. In regressive phases, the islands composed of these sediments and other, more ancient islands were eroded. Each new sea transgression led to further accumulation of layered sediments. As a result of alternating transgressive and regressive phases the first alluvial-marine terrace formed, consisting of geological bodies of different ages. Determining the formation age of different areas of the first terrace and other marine terraces on the coast allowed the periods of increasing (8–6 Ka, 4.5–4 Ka, 2.5–1.5 Ka, 0.4–0.2 Ka) and decreasing (5 Ka, 3 Ka, 0.5 Ka) Laptev Sea levels to be distinguished in the Lena Delta area.


2021 ◽  
pp. 326-337
Author(s):  
Andrew V. Z. Brower ◽  
Randall T. Schuh

This chapter examines molecular clocks and time trees. Although laden with numerous process assumptions that may or may not be true (or knowable), the idea is appealingly straightforward: if amino acid substitutions in proteins occurred at a relatively steady pace that were more or less constant both over time and along each of the branches of a diverging evolutionary tree, then the number of substitutions would be directly related to the time since the taxa in question diverged from one another. However, evidence does not support a universal molecular clock. Evidence might or might not support “local” clocklike evolution among closely related taxa over relatively short time spans. Although absolute minimum ages for clades may be inferred from fossils, from biogeographical patterns, or extrapolated from secondary calibrations, such age estimates are subject to potentially significant error due to vagaries of geological dating as well as ambiguities of fossil identity. The test of a time tree hypothesis is to discover new fossil evidence that corroborates or falsifies it.


Radiocarbon ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 647-654 ◽  
Author(s):  
R E Taylor

Radiocarbon determinations, employing both decay and direct counting, were obtained on various organic fractions of four human skeletal samples previously assigned ages ranging from 28,000 to 70,000 years on the basis of their D/L aspartic acid racemization values. In all four cases, the 14C values require an order of magnitude reduction in age.


The outer east coast of Baffin Island is characterized by a series of sedimentary forelands. These contain a variety of litho- and biofacies associated with glacial marine and marine deposition into sea levels higher than those of the present. These high relative sea levels were associated with glacial isostatic loading and unloading of the crust by the NE sector of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. On the basis of amino acid epimerization ratios, eleven chronologically distinct units are delimited. The youngest unit is less than or equal to 10 ka, but all others are at or beyond the limits of radiocarbon dating. Based on biostratigraphy and amino acid data, the oldest units exposed in the forelands may be Pliocene in age. Molluscs, Foraminifera, and the palynology of buried soils and organics, indicate that the vast bulk of the exposed sequences contain floras and faunas that represent environments warmer than those at present. An analysis of modern and fossil pollen spectra suggests a steady decrease in low arctic conditions throughout the Quaternary.


1991 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles A. Laymon

AbstractTwelve reworked shell fragments were recovered from five till samples collected on Nottingham Island in western Hudson Strait, Canada. Total hydrolysate amino acid ratios (D-alloisoleucine/L-isoleucine) for each fragment range from 0.043 to 0.154 and are significantly higher than ratios for radiocarbon-dated Holocene shells, which average 0.022. One shell fragment with an aIle/Ile ratio of 0.065 yielded an AMS radiocarbon age of 44,200 ± 2300 yr B.P. (AA-3254). Absolute age estimates based on the amino acid ratios are constrained by reasonable limits on the estimated effective diagenetic temperature of the fossils. On this basis, the shell fragments are correlated with oxygen isotope substages 5e and 5a and stage 3 in the preferred hypothesis. Theses results independently support hypotheses calling for at least partial deglaciation and marine incursion in Hudson Strait and Hudson Bay at these times.


1982 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Wehmiller ◽  
D. F. Belknap

AbstractAmino acid enantiomeric (D/L) ratios in the mollusk Mercenaria are compared with recently published biostratigraphic and/or U-series solitary coral data from 22 Quaternary localities on the central and southern Atlantic Coastal Plain. In all cases, local relative aminostratigraphic sequences are consistent with relative ages inferred from U-series or biostratigraphic data, although occasionally more depositional events are recognized by aminostratigraphic than biostratigraphic methods. However, if the U-series data are used as age calibrations for the D/L values, latitudinal trends of “isochronous” D/L values are highly variable and conflict with trends expected from the present temperature gradient, which is smooth and nearly linear between 45° and 25° N. Age estimation can be performed independently of the U-series data using a kinetic model that relies on the assumption that Pleistocene temperature gradients have also been smooth functions of latitude, although significantly steeper than the present temperature gradient. Within the uncertainties of this assumption, kinetic model age estimates for localities in the coastal plain fall into the following groups: 70,000–130,000 yr, 200–250,000 yr, 300,000–400,000 yr, 500,000–600,000 yr, 700,000–800,000 yr, and > 1,000,000 yr. Major conflicts between these model age estimates are observed for localities near Charleston, South Carolina and in central Virginia. These conflicts could indicate that the basic temperature assumptions of aminostratigraphy are incorrect, and that apparent local aminostratigraphic sequences (clusters of different D/L values) could be due to factors other than age difference. Alternatively, some of the U-series dates may be only minimum ages for these localities.


1991 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanda Balescu ◽  
Susan C. Packman ◽  
Ann G. Wintle

AbstractThermoluminescence (TL) age estimates have been obtained on coarse-grained detrital feldspar from Eemian beach sand (substage 5e), early Weichselian dune sands (substages 5d and 5b), and pre-Eemian beach sand. The past radiation dose is obtained using the additive dose method. Even for the oldest samples, which date to 300,000 yr B.P. by other methods, the TL signal is not in saturation and can be doubled by the addition of laboratory radiation doses without saturation being achieved. This is contrasted with the behavior of polymineral, silt-sized grains from loess in the adjacent area. The TL age estimates are systematically underestimated by about 40% when compared with the expected geological ages. However, they are in correct stratigraphic order and demonstrate that stage 5 beach deposits can be distinguished from those resulting from earlier high sea levels using TL signals from potassium feldspars.


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