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Radiocarbon dating of wood using different pretreatment procedures: Application to the chronology of rotoehu ASH, New Zealand

  • G. M. Santos
  • , M. I. Bird
  • , B. Pillans
  • , L. K. Fifield
  • , B. V. Alloway
  • , J. Chappell
  • , P. A. Hausladen
  • , A. Arneth

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

52 Scopus citations

Abstract

We compare radiocarbon accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) ages of wood samples subjected to a conventional acid-base-acid pretreatment with stepped combustion (ABA-SC) with results from the same samples subjected to an acid-base-wet oxidation pretreatment with stepped combustion (ABOX-SC) and cellulose extraction with stepped combustion (CE-SC). The ABOX-SC procedure has been shown previously to lead to lower backgrounds for old charcoal samples. Analyses of relatively uncontaminated "14C-dead" samples of wood suggest that backgrounds of 0.11 ± 0.04 pMC are obtainable for both the ABOX-SC and ABA-SC procedures. Where wood is significantly contaminated the ABOX-SC technique provides significantly better decontamination than either the ABA-SC technique or cellulose extraction alone, although CE-SC can produce comparably low backgrounds to the ABOX-SC procedure. We also report the application of the ABOX-SC, ABA-SC and CE-SC procedures to wood samples associated with the chronologically controversial Rotoehu Ash eruption, New Zealand. New 14C-AMS dates from wood sampled from below the Rotoehu Ash span an age range of 43-50 ka BP consistent with recently presented OSL dates of 42-44 ka obtained for palaeosols beneath the ash.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)239-248
Number of pages10
JournalRadiocarbon
Volume43
Issue number2 PART I
DOIs
StatePublished - 2001
Externally publishedYes

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