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Science 25 July 1997:
Vol. 277. no. 5325, pp. 538 - 541
DOI: 10.1126/science.277.5325.538

Reports

Chlorine-36 in Fossil Rat Urine: An Archive of Cosmogenic Nuclide Deposition During the Past 40,000 Years

Mitchell A. Plummer, Fred M. Phillips, June Fabryka-Martin, H. J. Turin, Peter E. Wigand, Pankaj Sharma

Knowledge of the production history of cosmogenic nuclides, which is needed for geological and archaeological dating, has been uncertain. Measurements of chlorine-36/chlorine (36Cl/Cl) ratios in fossil packrat middens from Nevada that are radiocarbon-dated between about 38 thousand years ago (ka) and the present showed that 36Cl/Cl ratios were higher by a factor of about 2 before ~11 ka. This raises the possibility that cosmogenic production rates just before the close of the Pleistocene were up to 50% higher than is suggested by carbon-14 calibration data. The discrepancy could be explained by addition of low-carbon-14 carbon dioxide to the atmosphere during that period, which would have depressed atmospheric radiocarbon activity. Alternatively, climatic effects on 36Cl deposition may have enhanced the 36Cl/Cl ratios.

M. A. Plummer and F. M. Phillips, Department of Earth and Environmental Science, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, NM 87801, USA.
J. Fabryka-Martin and H. J. Turin, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA.
P. E. Wigand, Desert Research Institute, Reno, NV 89512, USA.
P. Sharma, Physics Department, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.


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