- Thermoluminescence dating
Thermoluminescence (TL) dating is the determination by means of measuring the accumulated
radiation dose of the time elapsed since material containingcrystal line minerals was eitherheat ed (lava ,ceramic s) or exposed to sunlight (sediment s). As the material is heated during measurements, a weak light signal, the thermoluminescence, proportional to the radiation dose is produced.Natural crystalline materials contain imperfections: impurity
ion s, stress dislocations, and other phenomena that disturb the regularity of theelectric field that holds theatom s in the crystalline lattice together. This leads to local humps and dips in itselectric potential . Where there is a dip (a so called 'electron trap'), a freeelectron may be attracted and trapped. The flux of ionizing radiation—both fromcosmic radiation and from naturalradioactivity —excites electrons from atoms in thecrystal lattice into theconduction band where they can move freely. Most excited electrons will soon recombine with lattice ions, but some will be trapped, storing part of theenergy of the radiation in the form of trappedelectric charge (Figure 1). Depending on the depth of the traps (the energy required to free an electron from them) the storage time of trapped electrons will vary- some traps are sufficiently deep to store charge for hundreds of thousands of years.In thermoluminescence dating, these long-term traps are used to determine the age of materials: When irradiated crystalline material is again heated or exposed to strong light, the trapped electrons are given sufficient energy to escape. In the process of recombining with a lattice ion, they lose energy and emit
photon s (light quanta), detectable in thelaboratory . The amount of light produced is proportional to the number of trapped electrons that have been freed which is in turn proportional to the radiation dose accumulated. In order to relate the signal (the thermoluminescence—light produced when the material is heated) to the radiation dose that caused it, it is necessary tocalibrate the material with known doses of radiation since thedensity of traps is highly variable.Thermoluminescence dating presupposes a "zeroing" event in the history of the material, either heating (in the case of pottery or lava) or exposure to sunlight (in the case of sediments), that removes the pre-existing trapped electrons. Therefore, at that point the thermoluminescence signal is zero. As time goes on, the ionizing radiation field around the material causes the trapped electrons to accumulate (Figure 2). In the laboratory, the accumulated radiation dose can be measured, but this by itself is insufficient to determine the time since the zeroing event. The radiation dose rate - the dose accumulated per year-must be determined first. This is commonly done by measurement of the alpha radioactivity (the
uranium andthorium content) and thepotassium content (K-40 is a beta and gammaemitter ) of the sample material. Often the gamma radiation field at the position of the sample material is measured, or it may be calculated from the alpha radioactivity and potassium content of the sample environment, and thecosmic ray dose is added in. Once all components of the radiation field are determined, the accumulated dose from the thermoluminescence measurements is divided by the dose accumulating each year, to obtain the years since the zeroing event.Thermoluminescence dating is used for material where
radiocarbon dating is not available, likesediments . Its use is now common in the authentication of old ceramic wares, for which it gives the approximate date of the last firing. An example of this can be seen in [http://www.antiquity.ac.uk/ant/079/ant0790390.htm Rink and Bartoll, 2005] . Thermoluminescence dating was modified for use as a "passive sand migration analysis tool" by [http://www.jcronline.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.2112%2F04-0406.1 Keizars, "et al.", 2008] (Figure 3), demonstrating the direct consequences resulting from the improper replenishment of starving beaches using fine sands, as well as providing a "passive" method of policing sand replenishment and observing riverine or other sand inputs along shorelines (Figure 4).Optical dating is a related measurement method which replaces heating with exposure to intense light. The sample material is illuminated with a very bright source ofinfrared light (forfeldspars ) or green or blue light (forquartz ).Ultraviolet light emitted by the sample is detected for measurement.ee also
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Thermoluminescent dosimeter s
*Thermoluminescence
*Geochronology References
* [http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~qtls/ Quaternary TL Surveys - Guide to thermoluminescence date measurement]
*Aitken, M.J., "Thermoluminescence Dating", Academic Press, London (1985) – Standard text for introduction to the field. Quite complete and rather technical, but well written and well organized. There is a second edition.
*Aitken, M.J., "Introduction to Optical Dating", Oxford University Press (1998) – Good introduction to the field.
*Keizars, K.Z. 2003. NRTL as a method of analysis of sand transport along the coast of the St. Joseph Peninsula, Florida. GAC/MAC 2003. Presentation: Brock University, St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada.
* [http://www.jcronline.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.2112%2F04-0406.1 Ķeizars, Z.] , Forrest, B., Rink, W.J. 2008. Natural Residual Thermoluminescence as a Method of Analysis of Sand Transport along the Coast of the St. Joseph Peninsula, Florida. Journal of Coastal Research, 24: 500-507.
*Keizars, Z. 2008b. NRTL trends observed in the sands of St. Joseph Peninsula, Florida. Queen's University. Presentation: Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
* [http://www.antiquity.ac.uk/ant/079/ant0790390.htm Rink, W.J.] , Bartoll, J. 2005. Dating the geometric Nasca lines in the Peruvian desert. Antiquity, 79: 390-401.
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