Abstract

A newly developing method, rock surface luminescence dating, provides a novel means of constraining the burial age of fluvial gravel and unveiling the transport and exposure-burial process of fluvial bed-load. A crucial requirement for successful age determination in luminescence dating of buried rock surfaces is that a sufficiently thick surficial layer was reset to a near-zero level of signal prior to deposition and burial. However, little such effort has been made on modern fluvial gravels from various depositional environments to provide a sound justification for the use of luminescence dating in such settings. In this study, we reported an investigation of daylight bleaching in modern cobbles with different sizes and shapes at a modern river floodplain from the Manas River, Tian Shan, to test the reliability and applicability of fluvial cobble optical dating. Four multi-elevated-temperature post-infrared infrared (MET-pIRIR) stimulated luminescence signals of rock slices were measured using a modified MET-pIRIR protocol to establish residual luminescence-depth profiles. The residual does of pIRIR and MET-pIRIR signals of sub-surface rock slices were also estimated using different modified SAR protocols. The results showed that the high temperature IRSL signal could be reset to ∼2–3 mm depth into cobbles surface and flat cobbles seem easier to bleach than spherical cobbles. The residual doses of sub-surface rock slices of cobbles from modern river floodplain was ∼0.4 Gy and ∼1.1 Gy for the IR50 and the pIRIR170 signal respectively, suggesting a residual age of ∼0.1 ka and ∼0.2 ka. The residual ages of MET-pIRIR signals of sub-surface rock slices of cobble MNS2-5 were ∼0.5–1 ka at higher stimulation temperature. Our results show that the fluvial cobble optical dating techniques have great potential for providing reliable chronologies for river floodplain gravel and other fluvial depositional events.

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