Unreliability of 14 C Dates from Organic Matter of Soils

Contamination by recent carbon and the turnover of organic matter make dating of ancient soils difficult. In order to isolate the oldest organic fraction of sediments, two main extraction methods were previously proposed: 1) alkaline solubilization of humus that separates humins, humic acids, and fu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inRadiocarbon Vol. 22; no. 3; pp. 919 - 929
Main Authors Gilet-Blein, Nicole, Marien, Gérard, Evin, Jacques
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 1980
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Summary:Contamination by recent carbon and the turnover of organic matter make dating of ancient soils difficult. In order to isolate the oldest organic fraction of sediments, two main extraction methods were previously proposed: 1) alkaline solubilization of humus that separates humins, humic acids, and fulvic acids, and 2) successive hydrolyses that solubilize increasingly resisting products. Both preparation methods were tested on the same actual or fossil soils of different pedologic types from five geologic profiles on which other chronologic data are available. Analytic results show that 14 C ages obtained from alkaline extraction products differ according to the duration of treatments and characteristics of soils: while hydrolysis should yield more homogeneous results and isolate oldest fractions. It seems likely that true ages of geologic formations were never obtained from their organic matter and that the oldest organic fraction, contemporaneous with the sediment formation, completely disappears. Thus, most ages from 14 C dating of organic matter of soils must be too recent.
ISSN:0033-8222
1945-5755
DOI:10.1017/S0033822200010328