Abstract

Determining the age of precise sea level markers such as marine terraces is often difficult because of the inherent limitation of traditional dating methods. A novel method based on Optical Stimulated Luminescence applicable to rock surfaces has been showing great promise in dating boulder and cobble surfaces from various environments. We performed Optically Stimulated Luminescence Rock Surface Dating (OSL RSD) on five cobbles from a basal transgressive lag deposit sealing a marine terrace referred to as the Last Interglacial (Marine Isotopic Stage 5e). We applied a consistent and highly selective 3-step acceptance criteria on five cobbles and obtained that only one was sufficiently well-bleached prior to burial. The resulting ages of 131 ± 8 ka and 127 ± 8 ka (obtained on 22 analyzed aliquots, n = 22) derived from the post-infrared infrared stimulated signal at 225oC (pIRIR225) and the preceding infrared stimulated signal at 50oC (pIR50/225), respectively, are consistent with each other as well as with the conventional luminescence age of ∼135 ka from the same sequence and with the U/Th age of ∼130 ka obtained from coral fragments. This work demonstrates that the RSD is a promising method for dating gravel veneer deposits overlaying marine terraces, enabling new chronologies for similar Quaternary deposits.

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