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Detecting post-depositional sediment disturbance in sandy deposits using optical luminescence
Authors:Mark D Bateman  Claire H Boulter  Andrew S Carr  Charles D Frederick  Duane Peter  Michael Wilder
Institution:

aSheffield Centre for International Drylands Research, Department of Geography, Winter Street, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, South Yorkshire S10 2TN, UK

bGeography and the Environment Department, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA

cGeo-Marine, Inc., 550 East Fifteenth Street, Plano, TX 75074, USA

Abstract:Post-depositional mixing or exhumation is common in surficial sediments, yet may be unobservable from field evidence. However, any disturbance may have significant consquences in terms of establishing a reliable luminescence age determination. Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) measurements, particularly measurements at the single grain level, can be used to gain an insight into both contemporary and past post-depositional processes.

This paper examines sites from Texas and Florida (USA) with independent chronological control to demonstrate the potential effects of varying degrees of bioturbation on OSL. Results show that contemporary soil forming processes clearly impact on the palaeodose (De) replicate distributions which are measured in order to derive an OSL age. Significant levels of scatter and apparently zero dose grains are observed in the upper-most sediments; declining with depth from the surface. De replicates from undisturbed and fully bleached sediments are unskewed, show low overdispersion (OD) and comparable single grain and single aliquot OSL ages. Bioturbated sediments, however, may show highly skewed multi-model De distributions with higher OD values, zero dose grains at depth, and significant diffences between single grain and single aliquot results. True burial ages may be derived from minimally bioturbated sediments through the application of statistical analysis such as finite mixture modelling to isolate De components. However, for significantly bioturbated sediments, the latter approach, even at the single grain level, produces inaccurate ages. In such cases we argue that additional evidence (both dating and contexual) may be required to identify with confidence the burial De population.

Keywords:Bioturbation  Single grain  Optically stimulated luminescence dating
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