Abstract

Abstract. The current geochronological state of the art for applying the radiocarbon (14C) method to deep-sea sediment archives lacks key information on sediment bioturbation. Here, we apply a sediment accumulation model that simulates the sedimentation and bioturbation of millions of foraminifera, whereby realistic 14C activities (i.e. from a 14C calibration curve) are assigned to each single foraminifera based on its simulation time step. We find that the normal distribution of 14C age typically used to represent discrete-depth sediment intervals (based on the reported laboratory 14C age and measurement error) is unlikely to be a faithful reflection of the actual 14C age distribution for a specific depth interval. We also find that this deviation from the actual 14C age distribution is greatly amplified during the calibration process. Specifically, we find a systematic underestimation of total geochronological error in many cases (by up to thousands of years), as well as the generation of age–depth artefacts in downcore calibrated median age. Even in the case of “perfect” simulated sediment archive scenarios, whereby sediment accumulation rate (SAR), bioturbation depth, reservoir age and species abundance are all kept constant, the 14C measurement and calibration processes generate temporally dynamic median age–depth artefacts on the order of hundreds of years – whereby even high SAR scenarios (40 and 60 cm kyr−1) are susceptible. Such age–depth artefacts can be especially pronounced during periods corresponding to dynamic changes in the Earth's Δ14C history, when single foraminifera of varying 14C activity can be incorporated into single discrete-depth sediment intervals. For certain lower-SAR scenarios, we find that downcore discrete-depth true median age can systematically fall outside the calibrated age range predicted by the 14C measurement and calibration processes, thus leading to systematically inaccurate age estimations. In short, our findings suggest the possibility of 14C-derived age–depth artefacts in the literature. Furthermore, since such age–depth artefacts are likely to coincide with large-scale changes in global Δ14C, which themselves can coincide with large-scale changes in global climate (such as the last deglaciation), 14C-derived age–depth artefacts may have been previously incorrectly attributed to changes in SAR coinciding with global climate. Our study highlights the need for the development of improved deep-sea sediment 14C calibration techniques that include an a priori representation of bioturbation for multi-specimen samples.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Background and rationaleFor over half a century, radiocarbon (14C) dating has been applied to deep-sea sediment archives

  • This study demonstrates the possibility of the current 14C measurement and calibration method, as it is applied to multi-specimen samples within palaeoceanography, to produce age–depth artefacts, even in the case of best-case sediment archives where sediment accumulation rate (SAR), bioturbation depth (BD), species abundance and reservoir age are all constant

  • Age. (f) For each scenario, the discrete-depth offset between the true median age and the calibrated median age. (g) For each scenario, the difference between the calibrated highest posterior density (HPD) 95.4 % age range and the true 95.4 % age range of the sediment. (h, i, j, k) A visualisation of 14C calibration skill for select discrete-depth samples from various scenarios indicated on the figure panels

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Summary

Background and rationale

For over half a century, radiocarbon (14C) dating has been applied to deep-sea sediment archives. The presence of uniform mixing within the BD throughout the sedimentation history of a deep-sea sediment archive results, in the case of temporally constant SAR and BD, in the single-specimen population of discrete sediment intervals being characterised by an exponential probability density function (PDF) for true age, with a maximum probability for younger ages and a long tail towards older ages The existence of such a distribution has been supported by the post-depositional mixing of tephra layers (Bramlette and Bradley, 1942; Nayudu, 1964; Ruddiman and Glover, 1972; Abbott et al, 2018) and the smoothing out of the downcore mean signal (Guinasso and Schink, 1975; Pisias, 1983; Schiffelbein, 1984; Bard et al, 1987; Löwemark et al, 2008; Trauth, 2013), the smoothing of which can change downcore in tandem with foraminiferal abundance changes (Ruddiman et al, 1980; Peng and Broecker, 1984; Paull et al, 1991; Löwemark et al, 2008). Systematic investigation is lacking into whether neglecting to include the effects of bioturbation has significant impact upon the interpretative accuracy of 14C dating as it is currently applied in palaeoceanography, i.e. if it may lead to spurious geochronological interpretations

Experimental design
The synthetic core simulation
Virtual discrete-depth analysis
Best-case scenario simulations
Calibration amplifies 14C age distribution mischaracterisation
The influence of the analytical blank
Dynamic sediment core scenarios
Conclusion
Findings
Outlook and future research

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