Abstract

Abstract The upper limit of optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating technique is usually defined by signal saturation. In nature the OSL signal saturates even faster than in the laboratory. Here we present a study on natural saturation of OSL and thermally transferred OSL (TT-OSL) signals of quartz grains from Nilotic origin. Quartz samples from two representative sections from the coastal plain of Israel, and which span approximately similar time frames, were used to construct semi-natural dose response curves (DRC) for OSL and TT-OSL by plotting the natural signal of samples against their depth and equivalent dose (De). Samples from these two sections, as well as from other sites, define typical OSL and TT-OSL DRC's for Nilotic quartz that was transported to the eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea. The constructed semi-natural OSL DRC is unique to the quartz of Nilotic origin and indicates the upper limit for reliable OSL dating of this quartz at 140 Gy due to signal saturation. The natural TT-OSL luminescence grows linearly up to 400 Gy, and is constant for 400–600 Gy. Steady-state between TT-OSL trap-filling, due to ionizing radiation, and concurrent thermal emptying of these traps is achieved at 600 Gy. TT-OSL dating of the Nilotic quartz is expected to underestimate ages over ∼120 ka due to the low thermal stability of the signal.

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