Geochronology (Aug 2024)

Production rate calibration for cosmogenic <sup>10</sup>Be in pyroxene by applying a rapid fusion method to <sup>10</sup>Be-saturated samples from the Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica

  • M. Bergelin,
  • G. Balco,
  • G. Balco,
  • L. B. Corbett,
  • P. R. Bierman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/gchron-6-491-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
pp. 491 – 502

Abstract

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Measurements of multiple cosmogenic nuclides in a single sample are valuable for various applications of cosmogenic nuclide exposure dating and allow for correcting exposure ages for surface weathering and erosion and establishing exposure–burial history. Here we provide advances in the measurement of cosmogenic 10Be in pyroxene and constraints on the production rate that provide new opportunities for measurements of multi-nuclide systems, such as 10Be/3He, in pyroxene-bearing samples. We extracted and measured cosmogenic 10Be in pyroxene from two sets of Ferrar Dolerite samples collected from the Transantarctic Mountains in Antarctica. One set of samples has 10Be concentrations close to saturation, which allows for the production rate calibration of 10Be in pyroxene by assuming production–decay equilibrium. The other set of samples, which has a more recent exposure history, is used to determine if a rapid fusion method can be successfully applied to samples with Holocene to Last Glacial Maximum exposure ages. From measured 10Be concentrations in the near-saturation sample set we find the production rate of 10Be in pyroxene to be 3.74 ± 0.10 atoms g−1 yr−1, which is consistent with 10Be/3He paired nuclide ratios from samples assumed to have simple exposure. Given the high 10Be concentration measured in this sample set, a sample mass of ∼ 0.5 g of pyroxene is sufficient for the extraction of cosmogenic 10Be from pyroxene using a rapid fusion method. However, for the set of samples that have low 10Be concentrations, measured concentrations were higher than expected. We attribute spuriously high 10Be concentrations to failure in removing all meteoric 10Be and/or a highly variable and poorly quantified procedural blank background correction.