Abstract

Trapped charge techniques of luminescence and electron spin resonance (ESR) are classic tools for dating Quaternary deposits. Over the past decade, these techniques have been routinely applied to investigate provenance and/or the sedimentary history of quartz grains based on their different luminescence and ESR characteristics. Of these, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) sensitivity is one of the most widely investigated parameter for luminescence-based provenance approach. A majority of studies on this parameter are based on evaluation of multi-grain quartz OSL sensitivity of the samples. This is particularly concerning because single-grain quartz luminescence studies have shown that the luminescence signal of a multi-grain aliquot is contributed by less than ∼1–10% of the total grains. Since the sole criteria for discrimination of sources based on luminescence sensitivity relies on its intensity, therefore the results based on multi-grain analysis will most likely be skewed depending on the ‘proportion’ and ‘brightness’ of a few grains. This demands a need to evaluate the potential of single-grain quartz OSL sensitivity in provenance studies. In this study, we investigate single and multi-grain quartz OSL sensitivity from compositionally different sandstones with well-characterised sources based on U–Pb zircon ages. We further complement this analysis with characterisation of ESR centres commonly used in quartz provenance, namely E′1 and [AlO4]0 centres. Our study shows that single-grain quartz OSL sensitivity can help distinguish between sediments that have a predominant input from a single source as compared to those with contribution from multiple sources, which otherwise cannot be inferred from multi-grain studies. Moreover, our results on characterisation of quartz-based ESR intensity of E′1 and saturated [AlO4]0 centres successfully differentiates between sandstones and further complements the luminescence-based characterisation.

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