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Carbon exchange reservoir in the real world[edit]

Radiocarbon Variations and Absolute Chronology (Twelfth Nobel Symposium) (edit. by Olsson, I. U.) (Wiley, New York, 1970).

Libby's original exchange reservoir hypothesis assumes that the exchange reservoir is constant all over the world. The calibration method also assumes that variation in 14C level is global, such that a small number of samples from a specific year are sufficient for calibration. [1]

The following variances in the carbon exchange reservoir are seen in the real world, they are assumed insignificant or are accounted for in calibration:

  • Erosion and immersion of carbonate rocks (which are older than 60,000 years and so do not contain 14C) causes an increase in 12C and 13C in the exchange reservoir, which depends on local weather conditions and can vary the ratio of carbon that living material ingests. This is believed negligible since most erosion will flow into the sea.[2]
  • Volcanic eruptions eject large amount of carbonate into the air, causing an increase in 12C and 13C in the exchange reservoir and can vary the exchange ratio locally. This explains the often irregular dating achieved in volcanic areas.[3]
  • 14C is known to behave chemically in a way different from 12C and 13C (due to different atomic mass), such that it is possible one isotope will be involved in decomposition reactions out of ratio with other isotopes, but the chemical behavior effects are extremely minor.[4]
  • The earth is not affected evenly by cosmic radiation, the magnitude of the radiation depends on land altitude and earth's magnetic field strength at any given location, causing local variation in 14C production. This is accounted for by having calibration curves for different locations of the globe. However this cannot always be performed, as tree rings for calibration are only recoverable from certain locations.[5]

These effects were first confirmed when samples of wood from around the world, which all had the same age (based on tree ring analysis), showed variance from the expected per minute decay frequency, assuming they had the same 14C ratios. This meant the dating of the samples varied by as much as 700 years. Calibration techniques and tree samples continue to increase the accuracy. Samples are accurate to 'at worst' 700 years.[6]

Note[edit]

Computations of ages and dates[edit]

Equivalent methods to calculate ages are described in the following.

Method 1. Comparison table[edit]

For radioactive decay, the relationship between fraction remaining (f) and the number of half-lives (n) elapsed is:


n

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

...

n

f

1/2

1/4

1/8

1/16

1/32

1/64

1/128

1/256

...

...

 

1/21

1/22

1/23

1/24

1/25

1/26

1/27

1/28

...

1/2n

years

5730

11460

17190

22920

28650

34380

40110

45840

...

...

Given any intermediate f value, its comparison with the n and age rows provides a rough idea of the age range, sidestepping any calculations. For example, if f = 1/10, n lies between 3 and 4 half lives and the age t lies between 17,190 and 22,920 yrs.

For precise age calculations, see the next methods.

Method 2. Simple equation[edit]

From the above it follows that the fraction remaining after time n is: f = 1/2n, which is equivalent to f = (1/2)n or f = 0.5n. This makes the calculation of the age, if the fraction remaining is known, quite simple.

Solving the above relationship for n using the properties of logarithms:

f = 0.5n becomes
ln f = n·ln 0.5 and

Example 1: for a sample containing 0.25 of the original C-14:

; solving this gives n = 2 half lives and
2 half lives * 5730 yrs/half life = 11,460 yrs.

Example 2: for a sample that contains 0.06780 of the original C-14:

; solving this gives n = 3.883 half lives and
3.883 half lives * 5730 yrs/half life = 22,250 yrs.

[Suggestion, include Example 3, for an age near 50,000 yrs]

Method 3. From the laboratory to a calendrical date[edit]

Radiocarbon dates are obtained, in the laboratory, after the following succesive steps:

  • laboratory measurements of three specific (radio)activities: activity of the sample to be dated (S), activity of a modern standard (M), and activity of a background sample (B),
  • calculation of the net sample activity, as fraction of modern, i.e. (S-B)/M; this is the value denoted below as
  • calculation of the sample raw age (t) using the formula given below, and
  • evaluation of the calibrated calendrical date by inputting t into a calibration curve.

The radioactive decay of carbon-14 follows an exponential decay. A quantity is said to be subject to exponential decay if it decreases at a rate proportional to its value. Symbolically, this can be expressed as the following differential equation, where N is the quantity and λ is a positive number called the decay constant:

The solution to this equation is:

,

where is the initial value of .

For the particular case of radiocarbon decay, this equation is written:

,

where, for a given sample of carbonaceous matter:

= number of radiocarbon atoms at , i.e. the origin of the disintegration time,
= number of radiocarbon atoms remaining after radioactive decay during the time ,
radiocarbon decay or disintegration constant.
Two related times can be defined:
  • half-life: time lapsed for half the number of radiocarbon atoms in a given sample, to decay,
  • mean- or average-life: mean or average time each radiocarbon atom spends in a given sample until it decays.

It can be shown that:

= = radiocarbon half-life = 5568 years (Libby value)
= = radiocarbon mean- or average-life = 8033 years (Libby value)

Notice that dates are customarily given in years BP which implies t(BP) = -t because the time arrow for dates runs in reverse direction from the time arrow for the corresponding ages. From these considerations and the above equation, it results:

For a raw radiocarbon date:

and for a raw radiocarbon age:

One of these t values is then inputted into one of the calibration curves, thus obtaining a range of calendrical dates.

  1. ^ Libby, W.F. Radiocarbon dating, 2nd Edition, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1955.
  2. ^ Kolchin, B. A., and Y. A. Shez. Absolute Archaeological Datings and their Problems, Moscow, Nauka, 1972.
  3. ^ Kolchin, B. A., and Y. A. Shez. Absolute Archaeological Datings and their Problems, Moscow, Nauka, 1972.
  4. ^ Aitken, M. J. Physics and Archaeology, New York, Interscience Publishers, 1961.
  5. ^ Crowe, C Carbon-14 activity during the past 5000 years, Nature, Volume 182, 1958.
  6. ^ Libby, W.F. Radiocarbon; an Atomic Clock, Annual Science and Humanity journal, 1962.