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      Age Structure of Holocene Coastal Sediments: Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia

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      Radiocarbon
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          Shells in beach-ridge and chenier Holocene deposits from the Gulf of Carpentaria, Queensland, have been dated by radiocarbon. Possible contamination of carbonate by post-depositional diagenetic processes, isotopic fractionation, ocean reservoir environmental effect, and association of biological age of sample material with depositional event have been examined in order to validate dating of samples from this environment. A numerical methodology used for comparing ‘groups’ of14C dates strongly supports morphostratigraphic evidence that time discontinuities occur within both chenier and beach-ridge sequences. Four episodes are recognized in each area, all younger than ca 5800 years ago, the time when sea level reached its postglacial maximum in the Gulf of Carpentaria. To some extent, these episodes are out of phase, reflecting different modes of strandline accumulation.

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          Quaternary Sea Level Fluctuations on a Tectonic coast: New 230Th/234U Dates from the Huon Peninsula, New Guinea

          Emerged coral reef terraces on the Huon Peninsula in New Guinea were reported in a reconnaissance dating study by Veeh and Chappell 1970. Age definition achieved was not good for several important terraces, and we report here a series of new 230Th/234U dates, which further clarify the history of late Quaternary eustatic sea level fluctuations. More than 20 reef complexes are present, ranging well beyond 250,000 yr old: we are concerned with the seven lowest complexes. Major reef-building episodes dated by 30Th/234U are reef complex I at 5–9 ka (kilo anno = 1000 yr), r.c. IIIb at 41 ka (four dates), r.c. IV at 61 ka (four dates), r.c. V at 85 ka (two dates), r.c. VI at 107 ka (two dates), and r.c. VII at 118–142 ka. Complex II was previously dated by 14C at 29 ka: this age has not yet been confirmed, and may be only a lower limit. The reef crests were built during or immediately before intervals of sea level maxima, when rates of rising sea level and tectonic uplift briefly coincided. The culmination of each reef-building episode was only a few thousand years in duration, and multiple dates from the same reef complex generally group within the statistical errors of the individual dates.
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            Some Effects of Partial Recrystallisation on 14C dating Late Pleistocene Corals and Molluscs

            The issue of sea level during the last interstadial revolves largely around the problem of achieving reliable 14C dates for shell carbonate from Late Pleistocene shallow marine and littoral deposits. A set of 27 samples were collected from Late Pleistocene reefs in New Guinea, and measurements made of 13C, 14C, plus the degree of recrystallisation (determined by X-ray diffraction). The original fibrous aragonite structure of the samples (corals and clams) is seen in thin section to recrystallise in two quite different modes. The carbon isotope results strongly suggest that one mode, the sparry calcite recrystallisation, represents an open geochemical system which allows contamination by more recent 14C, while the subtle coarsening mode of recrystallisation represents a closed system, often yielding reliable results. The reliability of the latter can be validated if a similarly recrystallised sample, known to be outside the range of 14C dating, shows a background 14C count.
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              Further Investigations of Storing and Treatment of Foraminifera and Mollusks for C14-Dating

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Radiocarbon
                Radiocarbon
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0033-8222
                1945-5755
                1980
                July 2016
                : 22
                : 03
                : 718-727
                Article
                10.1017/S0033822200010080
                9c6b4dbe-f67b-4268-951b-364fb9c15e45
                © 1980
                History

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