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    Glia's Avatar
    Glia
     

    Our view of Earth's history sharpens (posted on Portside)

    (1) A New Leap Forward for Radiocarbon Dating
    (2) Reports Put New Spin on Story of Moon's Creation

    (1)
    A New Leap Forward for Radiocarbon Dating
    By Joseph Stromberg
    Smithsonian Magazine
    October 18, 2012
    https://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/sci...carbon-dating/

    Until 1949, when archaeologists dug up prehistoric
    bones, stone points, charcoal remnants or other
    artifacts from early human history, they had no way of
    knowing exactly how old these objects were. Chemist
    Willard Libby changed that, devising an ingenious method
    for dating ancient objects based on the types of carbon
    atoms contained within them.

    Libby and his colleagues based their idea on the fact
    that living things incorporate tiny amounts of a certain
    isotope of carbon (C-14) from the atmosphere into their
    structure; when they die, they stop adding new C-14, and
    the quantity left inside slowly degrades into a
    different element, nitrogen-14. By figuring out that the
    half-life of C-14 (the amount of time it takes for half
    of a given quantity of C-14 to decay into N-14) is 5,730
    years, they could chemically analyze the ratio of C-14
    to N-14 inside a piece of wood or bone and determine
    just how long it had been dead.

    This technique has revolutionized archaeology,
    anthropology and other fields, allowing us to determine
    the absolute age of objects up to around 60,000 years
    old. All along, though, the precision of this technique
    has been limited by the fact that the amount of C-14 in
    the atmosphere has varied over time-and there has never
    been a great record of just how much it has fluctuated
    over the years.

    With this in mind, a team of scientists from the
    University of Oxford and elsewhere was particularly
    excited when they excavated fossilized leaves and cores
    of sediment layers from beneath Japan's Lake Suigetsu.
    These samples might not look like much, but because of
    the sediment's unique layering and pristine condition,
    the find constitutes an unprecedented comprehensive
    record of atmospheric C-14 from roughly 11,200 to 52,800
    years ago. The samples of sediment from this one
    location on the earth's surface, in other words, will
    make our ability to date ancient artifacts found
    anywhere on the planet significantly more precise.

    "The new results offer an important refinement of the
    atmospheric radiocarbon record and place the radiocarbon
    timescale on a firmer foundation," said Jesse Smith, an
    editor at Science, where the findings were published in
    a paper today.

    A specific set of processes and conditions that occur in
    the lake help to explain why the sediment cores and leaf
    samples are so valuable. Each winter, small light-
    colored algae called diatoms die and cover the lake
    floor; each summer, they are in turn covered by a darker
    layer of sediment. Because the lake is extremely still,
    is low in oxygen and has not been disturbed by glaciers
    or geologic activity anytime in the last 52,800 years,
    these microscopic layers comprise a complete, annual
    record preserved in sediment cores.

    Moreover, because leaves and other organic materials
    have been trapped between the layers, the scientists
    were able to use the amount of C-14 in each leaf to
    construct a complete picture of atmospheric C-14 over
    time. Previously atmospheric C-14 records came from
    marine samples (which differ from those on land) or tree
    rings (which only dated to a little more than 12,000
    years ago), so these cores will greatly improve the
    precision of radiocarbon dating for older objects. The
    researchers "anchored" the new C-14 record to previous
    data by matching up the levels found in the more recent
    layers of the cores to those already known from the tree
    rings.

    "Although this record will not result in major revisions
    of dates, for example in archaeology, there will be
    changes in detail that are of the order of hundreds of
    years," said University of Oxford archaeologist Bronk
    Ramsey, the lead author of the paper. "Such changes can
    be very significant when you are trying to look at human
    responses to climate, [which are] often dated by other
    methods, for example through the Greenland ice cores. A
    more accurate calibrated time-scale will allow us to
    answer questions in archaeology, which previously we
    have not had the resolution to address."

    Researchers suspected that the conditions in Lake
    Suigetsu could yield such a crucial C-14 record as early
    as 1993, but they had encountered technical difficulties
    in extracting and analyzing intact cores until now.
    "This is a realization of a 20-year-long Japanese
    dream," said co-author Takeshi Nakagawa of the
    University of Newcastle upon Tyne in England. Although
    it's taken some time to successfully recover the
    samples, they will now help researchers to figure out
    the ages of much older specimens and artifacts.

    (2)
    Reports Put New Spin on Story of Moon's Creation
    Studies shed new light on the massive collision
    that planetary scientists believe led to the moon's
    birth. But will we ever know which theory is correct?
    By Eryn Brown
    Los Angeles Times
    October 17, 2012
    https://www.latimes.com/news/science...0,316262.story

    Scientists may never know exactly how the moon and Earth
    were formed some 4.5 billion years ago, but this week
    their understanding of the cataclysmic event made a
    significant leap forward.

    In a slew of studies published Wednesday, planetary
    scientists provided new evidence supporting the long-
    standing - but imperfect - theory that the Earth and
    moon formed after the proto-Earth collided with another
    huge planetary body, sometimes referred to as Theia.

    Some of that evidence comes from super-precise
    measurements of the zinc in lunar rock samples collected
    by Apollo astronauts. These findings, reported in the
    journal Nature, support the idea that the moon's birth
    had to have resulted from "a big event with lots of
    energy," strong enough to vaporize rock, said study
    leader Frederic Moynier, a geochemist at Washington
    University.

    Separately, two studies published in the journal Science
    detailed two scenarios of what such a powerful crash
    might plausibly have looked like.

    Both collision-simulation papers may solve an
    intractable problem with the classic story scientists
    told about the moon's birth. That story goes something
    like this: Two planets, one Earth-sized and one Mars-
    sized, slammed together. The smaller body, Theia, was
    obliterated completely, its materials flung asunder to
    form a disk around the Earth that before long coalesced
    to form the moon.

    The theory explains the distance between the two bodies,
    their relative sizes and other physical properties. But
    in the last decade or so, a problem arose: The chemistry
    didn't match up with the physics.

    "What's happening now is an attempt to salvage the
    theory," said Erik Asphaug, a planetary scientist at UC
    Santa Cruz who was not involved in the new research.

    According to computer simulations of the theorized
    collision, the moon should have been composed mainly of
    materials from Theia. Instead, analysis showed that rock
    samples from the moon and Earth appeared to contain the
    same amounts of the same types of oxygen, titanium,
    silicon and other elements.

    The similarity of these distinct chemical isotopes was
    taken as a sign that the Earth and moon were actually
    made of the same stuff - and meant that planetary
    scientists would need to rethink the details of how the
    giant impact happened, said Harvard University
    researcher Matija Cuk, a coauthor of one of the new
    simulations.

    The main problem the computer modelers faced was that
    any collisions resulting in an Earth and a moon with
    shared geochemistry required the ancient Earth to be
    spinning too fast to allow for the 24-hour rotation that
    exists today.

    Cuk and his Harvard colleague Sarah Stewart solved the
    conundrum by suggesting that a fast-spinning proto-Earth
    could have slowed during a period when the moon and the
    sun aligned in such a way that gravity warped Earth's
    orbit, putting the brakes on its rotation.

    Plugging the appropriate conditions into their computer
    simulation, they found that a small body about half the
    size of Mars striking the early Earth nearly head-on
    would completely obliterate both bodies, with all the
    material mixing together.

    "Everything is molten," Cuk said.

    Most of the heavy iron from both planetary cores would
    combine and coalesce to form Earth's core. The blended
    lighter rock from both bodies would form the outer
    layers of the Earth as well as the moon.

    Robin Canup, a planetary scientist at the Southwest
    Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., used Cuk's and
    Stewart's idea about how the Earth's rotation might have
    slowed and developed another scenario for the moon's
    creation. Also writing in Science, she showed that two
    similarly sized bodies, each about half the mass of the
    modern Earth, could have collided at a relatively slow
    speed and merged, their contents creating a pool of
    material that later split apart into Earth and moon.

    By figuring out how Earth's spin might have slowed,
    Canup said, scientists have "greatly broadened the class
    of impacts that might be viable."

    Caltech planetary scientist David Stevenson, who was not
    involved with the research, said that the new models
    "are a stepping stone toward a more satisfying story"
    but that "we're only part of the way."

    David Paige, a moon expert at UCLA who was also not part
    of either modeling study, said it might not be possible
    to know exactly what happened.

    "So much of what existed prior to the impact has been
    obliterated," he said. "It's a whodunit mystery with
    very few clues lying around."

    He said, however, that isotopic research might offer
    part of the solution.

    In the report published in Nature, Moynier and his
    colleagues used sophisticated mass spectrometry to show
    that the blend of different zinc isotopes on the moon is
    not the same as the blend on Earth. Lighter versions of
    the metal were slightly depleted on the moon, suggesting
    that the lighter zinc must have evaporated during some
    kind of impact, the team reported.

    That doesn't do much to determine whether either
    collision scenario is correct. It may point a way
    forward for the planetary scientists who'll try to
    figure it out, however, Paige noted.

    "It's through more measurements like this zinc one that
    we're able to better sort it out," he said.

    For his part, Moynier said he planned to examine
    rubidium isotopes in lunar rocks next.
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