Radiocarbon dating of minute gastropods and new constraints on the timing of late Quaternary spring-discharge deposits in southern Arizona, USA
Gastropod shells are commonly preserved in Quaternary sediments, but are often avoided for radiocarbon dating because some taxa incorporate 14C-deficient carbon during shell formation. Recently, Brennan and Quade [(1997) Quat. Res. 47, 329–336] found that some minute taxa ( Vallonia, Pupilla, and Su...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology, 2004-02, Vol.204 (1), p.33-45 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gastropod shells are commonly preserved in Quaternary sediments, but are often avoided for radiocarbon dating because some taxa incorporate
14C-deficient carbon during shell formation. Recently, Brennan and Quade [(1997) Quat. Res. 47, 329–336] found that some minute taxa (
Vallonia,
Pupilla, and
Succineidae) appear to yield reliable
14C ages for late Pleistocene samples. A more rigorous evaluation of the
14C inventory of minute gastropods is presented here, which involved measuring the
14C activity of specimens collected live in two geologic settings that maximize the potential for ingestion of ‘old’ carbon: (1) alluvium dominated by Paleozoic carbonate rocks, and (2) adjacent to extant springs with highly
14C-deficient water present at the surface. We found that several minute taxa, including
Vallonia, incorporate significant and variable amounts of old carbon (∼2 to >30%) during shell formation. The
14C activities of the land snails
Pupilla blandi and
Euconulus fulvus, however, are indistinguishable from the
14C activity of live plants. The
14C activity of the semi-aquatic gastropod
Catinella sp. (Family:
Succineidae) deviates from modern values in the presence of
14C-deficient water by an amount equivalent to ∼10% of the local carbon-reservoir effect. These results imply that at least some minute gastropods can provide reliable
14C ages even when
14C-deficient carbon is readily available. To demonstrate an application of our findings, we
14C-dated shells from
P. muscorum,
E. fulvus, and
Succinea sp. (Family:
Succineidae) recovered from the Coro Marl, a late Pleistocene spring-fed marsh deposit exposed at the Murray Springs Paleoindian site in the San Pedro Valley of southern Arizona, USA. Radiocarbon ages obtained from the minute gastropods show that the unit was deposited between ∼25 000 and 13 000
14C years ago. The marl is situated >15 m above the modern water table at Murray Springs, and is similarly positioned in discontinuous outcrops along a ∼150-km stretch of the San Pedro Valley. Thus, the
14C ages of minute gastropods presented here may be used to infer the timing of high water-table levels throughout the valley. |
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ISSN: | 0031-0182 1872-616X |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0031-0182(03)00710-7 |