11.3+Absolute+Ages+of+Rocks

Lesson Objectives

 * Define the differences between absolute age and relative age.
 * Describe four methods of absolute dating.
 * Explain what radioactivity is and give examples of radioactive decay.
 * Explain how the decay of radioactive materials helps to establish the age of an object.
 * Estimate the age of an object, given the half-life and the amounts of radioactive and daughter materials.
 * Give four examples of radioactive materials that are used to date objects, and explain how each is used.
 * Describe how scientists know earth is billions of years old.

Introduction
What was missing from the early geologic time scale? While the order of events was given, the dates at which the events happened were not. With the discovery of radioactivity in the late 1800s, scientists were able to measure the exact age of some rocks in years. Absolute dating allows scientists to assign numbers to the breaks in the geologic time scale. Radiometric dating and other forms of absolute age dating allowed scientists to get an **absolute age** from a rock or fossil.

Tree Ring Dating
In locations where summers are warm and winters are cool, trees have a distinctive growth pattern. Tree trunks display alternating bands of light-colored, low density summer growth and dark, high density winter growth. Each light-dark band represents one year. By counting rings it is possible to find the number of years the tree lived (**Figure** [|below]). Cross-section showing growth rings. The width of these growth rings varies with the conditions present that year. A summer drought may make the tree grow more slowly than normal and so its light band will be relatively small. These tree-ring variations appear in all trees in a region. The same distinctive pattern can be found in all the trees in an area for the same time period. Scientists have created continuous records of tree rings going back over the past 2,000 years. Wood fragments from old buildings and ancient ruins can be age dated by matching up the pattern of tree rings in the wood fragment in question and the scale created by scientists. The outermost ring indicates when the tree stopped growing; that is, when it died. The tree-ring record is extremely useful for finding the age of ancient structures. An example of how tree-ring dating is used to date houses in the United Kingdom is found in this article @http://www.periodproperty.co.uk/ppuk_discovering_article_013.shtml.

Ice Cores and Varves
Other processes create distinct yearly layers that can be used for dating. On a glacier, snow falls in winter but in summer dust accumulates. This leads to a snow-dust annual pattern that goes down into the ice (**Figure** [|below]). Scientists drill deep into ice sheets, producing ice cores hundreds of meters long. The information scientists gather allows them to determine how the environment has changed as the glacier has stayed in its position. Analyses of the ice tell how concentrations of atmospheric gases changed, which can yield clues about climate. The longest cores allow scientists to create a record of polar climate stretching back hundreds of thousands of years. Ice core section showing annual layers. Lake sediments, especially in lakes that are located at the end of glaciers, also have an annual pattern. In the summer, the glacier melts rapidly, producing a thick deposit of sediment. These alternate with thin, clay-rich layers deposited in the winter. The resulting layers, called **varves**, give scientists clues about past climate conditions (**Figure** [|below]). A warm summer might result in a very thick sediment layer while a cooler summer might yield a thinner layer. Ancient varve sediments in a rock outcrop.

Age of Earth
During the 18th and 19th centuries, geologists tried to estimate the age of Earth with indirect techniques. What methods can you think of for doing this? One example is that by measuring how much sediment a stream deposited in a year, a geologist might try to determine how long it took for a stream to deposit an ancient sediment layer. Not surprisingly, these methods resulted in wildly different estimates. A relatively good estimate was produced by the British geologist Charles Lyell, who thought that 240 million years had passed since the appearance of the first animals with shells. Today scientists know that this event occurred about 530 million years ago. In 1892, William Thomson (later known as Lord Kelvin) calculated that the Earth was 100 million years old (**Figure** [|below]). He did this systematically assuming that the planet started off as a molten ball and calculating the time it would take for it to cool to its current temperature. This estimate was a blow to geologists and supporters of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, which required an older Earth to provide time for geological and evolutionary processes to take place. Lord Kelvin. Thomson’s calculations were soon shown to be flawed when **radioactivity** was discovered in 1896. Radioactivity is the tendency of certain atoms to decay into lighter atoms, a process that emits energy. Radioactive decay of elements inside Earth’s interior provides a steady source of heat, which meant that Thomson had grossly underestimated Earth’s age.

Radioactive Decay
Radioactivity also provides a way to find the absolute age of a rock. To begin, go back to the Earth's Minerals chapter and review the material about atoms. Some isotopes are radioactive; they are unstable and spontaneously change by gaining or losing particles. Two types of radioactive decay are relevant to dating Earth materials (**Table** [|below]): Types of Radioactive Decay|| Particle || Composition || Effect on Nucleus || The radioactive decay of a **parent isotope** (the original element) leads to the formation of stable **daughter isotopes**. As time passes, the number of parent isotopes decreases and the number of daughter isotopes increases (**Figure** [|below]). A parent emits an alpha particle to create a daughter. An animation of radioactive decay: http://lectureonline.cl.msu.edu/~mmp/applist/decay/decay.htm Radioactive materials decay at known rates, measured as a unit called **half-life**. The half-life of a radioactive substance is the amount of time it takes for half of the parent atoms to decay. This is how the material decays over time (see **Table** [|below]). Radioactive Decay|| No. of half lives passed || Percent parent remaining || Percent daughter produced || Pretend you find a rock with 3.125% parent atoms and 96.875% daughter atoms. How many half lives have passed? If the half-life of the parent isotope is 1 year, then how old is the rock? The decay of radioactive materials can be shown with a graph (**Figure** [|below]). Decay of an imaginary radioactive substance with a half-life of one year. An animation of half-life: http://einstein.byu.edu/~masong/htmstuff/Radioactive2.html Notice how it doesn’t take too many half lives before there is very little parent remaining and most of the isotopes are daughter isotopes. This limits how many half lives can pass before a radioactive element is no longer useful for dating materials. Fortunately, different isotopes have very different half lives. Radiometric decay is exponential. Learn how exponential growth and decay can be described mathematically in this video (**I&E 1e**): @http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UbwMW7Q6F3E (4:46).  RThe Scientific Method Made Easy //explains scientific method succinctly and well (//**//I&E 1a, 1b, 1c, 1d, 1f,1g, 1j, 1k//**//): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcavPAFiG14&#38;feature=related (9:55).//
 * Alpha || 2 protons, 2 neutrons || The nucleus contains two fewer protons and two fewer neutrons. ||
 * Beta || 1 electron || One neutron decays to form a proton and an electron. The electron is emitted. ||
 * 0 || 100 || 0 ||
 * 1 || 50 || 50 ||
 * 2 || 25 || 75 ||
 * 3 || 12.5 || 87.5 ||
 * 4 || 6.25 || 93.75 ||
 * 5 || 3.125 || 96.875 ||
 * 6 || 1.563 || 98.437 ||
 * 7 || 0.781 || 99.219 ||
 * 8 || 0.391 || 99.609 ||

Radiometric Dating of Rocks
Different isotopes are used to date materials of different ages. Using more than one isotope helps scientists to check the accuracy of the ages that they calculate.

Radiocarbon Dating
Radiocarbon dating is used to find the age of once-living materials between 100 and 50,000 years old. This range is especially useful for determining ages of human fossils and habitation sites (**Figure** [|below]). Carbon isotopes from the black material in these cave paintings places their creating at about 26,000 to 27,000 years BP (before present). The atmosphere contains three isotopes of carbon: carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14. Only carbon-14 is radioactive; it has a half-life of 5,730 years. The amount of carbon-14 in the atmosphere is tiny and has been relatively stable through time. Plants remove all three isotopes of carbon from the atmosphere during photosynthesis. Animals consume this carbon when they eat plants or other animals that have eaten plants. After the organism’s death, the carbon-14 decays to stable nitrogen-14 by releasing a beta particle. The nitrogen atoms are lost to the atmosphere, but the amount of carbon-14 that has decayed can be estimated by measuring the proportion of radioactive carbon-14 to stable carbon-12. As time passes, the amount of carbon-14 decreases relative to the amount of carbon-12. A video of carbon-14 decay is seen here: @http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81dWTeregEA; a longer explanation is here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udkQwW6aLik&#38;feature=related.

Potassium-Argon Dating
Potassium-40 decays to argon-40 with a half-life of 1.26 billion years. Argon is a gas so it can escape from molten magma, meaning that any argon that is found in an igneous crystal probably formed as a result of the decay of potassium-40. Measuring the ratio of potassium-40 to argon-40 yields a good estimate of the age of that crystal. Potassium is common in many minerals, such as feldspar, mica, and amphibole. With its half-life, the technique is used to date rocks from 100,000 years to over a billion years old. The technique has been useful for dating fairly young geological materials and deposits containing the bones of human ancestors. Potassium-argon dating is explained here: @http://id-archserve.ucsb.edu/anth3/courseware/chronology/09_potassium_argon_dating.html

Uranium-Lead Dating
Two uranium isotopes are used for radiometric dating. Uranium-lead dating is usually performed on zircon crystals (**Figure** [|below]). When zircon forms in an igneous rock, the crystals readily accept atoms of uranium but reject atoms of lead. If any lead is found in a zircon crystal, it can be assumed that it was produced from the decay of uranium. Zircon crystal. Uranium-lead dating is useful for dating igneous rocks from 1 million years to around 4.6 billion years old. Zircon crystals from Australia are 4.4 billion years old, among the oldest rocks on the planet.
 * Uranium-238 decays to lead-206 with a half-life of 4.47 billion years.
 * Uranium-235 decays to form lead-207 with a half-life of 704 million years.

Limitations of Radiometric Dating
Radiometric dating is a very useful tool for dating geological materials but it does have limits: 1. The material being dated must have measurable amounts of the parent and/or the daughter isotopes. Ideally, different radiometric techniques are used to date the same sample; if the calculated ages agree, they are thought to be accurate. 2. Radiometric dating is not very useful for determining the age of sedimentary rocks. To estimate the age of a sedimentary rock, geologists find nearby igneous rocks that can be dated and use relative dating to constrain the age of the sedimentary rock. Using a combination of radiometric dating, index fossils, and superposition, geologists have constructed a well-defined timeline of Earth history. With information gathered from all over the world, estimates of rock and fossil ages have become increasingly accurate. All of this evidence comes together to pinpoint the age of Earth at 4.6 billion years. A video discussing the evidence for this is found here: @http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5369-OobM4 The age of Earth is also discussed in this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lplcRdNDcps&#38;feature=channel

Lesson Summary

 * Earth is very old, and the study of Earth’s past requires us to think about times that were millions or even billions of years ago.
 * Techniques such as superposition and index fossils can tell you the relative age of objects, which objects are older and which are younger.
 * Geologists use a variety of techniques to establish absolute age, including radiometric dating, tree rings, ice cores, and annual sedimentary deposits called varves.
 * The concentrations of several radioactive isotopes (e.g. carbon-14, potassium-40, uranium-235 and -238) and their daughter products are used to accurately determine the age of rocks and organic remains.

Review Questions
1. Name four techniques that are used to determine the absolute age of an object or event. 2. A radioactive substance has a half-life of 5 million years. What is the age of a rock in which 25% of the original radioactive atoms remain? 3. A scientist is studying a piece of cloth from an ancient burial site. She determines that 40% of the original carbon-14 atoms remain in the cloth. Based on the carbon-decay graph (**Figure** [|below]), what is the approximate age of the cloth? Carbon-decay graph. 4. Which radioactive isotope or isotopes would you use to date each of the following objects? Explain each of your choices.

4.) A fossilized trilobite from a bed of sandstone that is about 500 million years old. 3.) The fur of a woolly mammoth that was recently recovered, frozen in a glacier. 2.) A 1-million-year-old bed of volcanic ash that contains the footprints of human ancestors. 1.) A 4-billion-year-old piece of granite. 5. Why is it important to assume that the rate of radioactive decay has remained constant over time?

Further Reading / Supplemental Links
Using tree rings and ice cores to track El Nino events: @http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elnino/reach/living.html The radiometric time scale and its use for geologists: @http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/geotime/radiometric.html.

Vocabulary
varve Sediment layers deposited in a glacial lake that represent an annual cycle. tree ring Rings of wood equaling one year of tree growth in a tree trunk. relative age Age of an object as compared to other objects. radiometric dating Process of using the concentrations of radioactive substances and daughter products to estimate the age of a material. radioactivity Emission of high-energy particles by unstable isotopes. radioactive isotope Substance that is unstable and likely to decay into another isotope. parent isotope An unstable isotope that will undergo radioactive decay. ice core Cylinder of ice extracted from a glacier or ice sheet. half-life The amount of time required for half of the atoms of a radioactive substance to decay to the daughter product. daughter product The product of the radioactive decay of a parent isotope. absolute age The actual age of a material in years.

Points to Consider

 * Why are techniques for dating, such as using tree rings, ice cores, and varves only useful for events that occurred in the last few thousand years?
 * Why is it important for geological and biological processes that the earth is very old?
 * Why is it important to use more than one method to find the age of a rock or other object?