Kip Hodges

and 2 more

Since initially developing laser ablation (U-Th)/He procedures for high-spatial-resolution dating of monazite more than a decade ago, our research group has refined the technique to the point that laser ablation dating of apatite, titanite, and zircon is now routine in the Arizona State University (Group 18) laboratories. We are actively exploring applications to additional minerals. Compared to conventional single-crystal (U-Th)/He dating, the laser ablation alternative offers some important advantages. Following appropriate analytical protocols, laser ablation dates require no alpha ejection corrections. In principle, most factors commonly believed to cause high apparent age dispersion in conventional datasets – parent element zoning, alpha particle implantation, and the presence of high-(U+Th) inclusions – can be mitigated using the laser ablation method. Analytical throughput is greatly enhanced compared to the conventional method because sample dissolution is not required for U+Th+Sm analysis. This is especially beneficial for detrital studies; in this presentation, we review examples of Group 18 research involving (U-Th)/He and U/Pb laser ablation double dating of detrital apatite and zircon. The principal limitations to the method are that: 1) relatively large grain sizes (≥ 100 μm) are sometimes required for especially young or low-(U-Th) materials; and 2) analytical uncertainties for these materials can be as much as a factor of two larger for laser ablation dates than for conventional dates due to a combination of the much smaller masses analyzed and uncertainties in the U, Th, and Sm concentrations of available appropriate standards. Frontier applications of this technology advance our understanding of the intracrystalline distribution of radiogenic 4He in accessory minerals. Here we show examples of both two-dimensional mapping of 4He in polished crystal interiors and one-dimensional depth profiling as practiced in the Group 18 laboratories. Zoning in 4He is very common in older crystals, and 4He distribution patterns can be much more complex than what might be expected simply from alpha ejection or grain-scale diffusive loss during cooling. Much of this complexity reflects non-concentric zoning in parent elements and, for older crystals, spatially variable radiation damage that results in spatially variable 4He diffusivity. The potential impacts of such phenomena on thermal and exhumation history modeling argue for a greater reliance on microanalytical procedures in (U-Th)/He thermochronology moving forward.
Apatite – Ca5(PO4)3(OH,F,Cl) – is a common accessory mineral in many terrestrial rocks and has a low (~75˚C) closure temperature for He retention[1]. As such the (U-Th-Sm)/He thermochronometer has become one of the most used dating techniques to constrain low temperature cooling histories of terrestrial samples. Apatite has been documented in many meteoritic, lunar, and martian samples, and is a particularly common accessory phase in many martian lithologies[2]. In meteoritic samples, (U-Th-Sm)/He dating of apatites provides some methodological challenges in that grains are frequently anhedral making it complicated to do a FT correction[2]. Results are commonly interpreted to represent the timing of shock metamorphism related to impacts onto the (planetary) surface which often correlates with cosmic-ray exposure ages[2]. NWA 7034, and its pairings, represents a piece of martian regolith that documents events on the martian surface that span approximately 4 Ga[3]. NWA 7034 is known to contain upwards of 4 wt.% apatite as detrital mineral fragments and as accessory phases in many lithic and impact-derived clasts[4]. These apatites have been previously analyzed geochronologically via U-Pb apatite and isotopically via δD, δ37Cl, and H2O using microbeam techniques[5,6]. At present, (U-Th)/He dating of NWA 7034 and its pairings has been restricted to bulk rock analyses[4,7,8,9]. This whole-rock approach relies on assumptions that the He, and its parent isotopes, are evenly distributed throughout the sample and that resetting of the WR-He thermochronometer is universal throughout the sample in response to the thermal pulse associated with the impact. These studies have yielded widely dispersed datasets that range from 50 Ma to 200 Ma, putting some of those assumptions into question[4,7,8,9]. In this contribution, we utilize the laser ablation double-dating (LADD) technique on individual apatites present within several polished slabs of NWA 7034. This targeted approach allows us to acquire (U-Th-Sm)/He ages, U-Pb ages, and trace element information within a petrological framework. The (U-Th-Sm)/He ages will provide additional constraints on the low temperature history of NWA7034 and help test the veracity of WR-He retention ages. References: [1] Zeitler et al. 1987 GCA, [2] Min 2005 Rev. Mineral Geochem; [3] Cassata et al. 2018, SciAdv; [4] Agee et al. 2013 Sci; [5] Hu et al. 2019 MAPS; [6] Davidson et al. 2020 EPSL; [7] Cartwright et al. 2014 EPSL; [8] Lindsay et al. 2021 MAPS; [9] Stephenson et al. 2017 MAPS

Jacqueline Giblin

and 3 more

Most thermochronological studies aimed at constraining exhumation rates rely on bedrock datasets. Often, they involve the analysis of samples collected along an elevation profile in terrains with high relief. However, there are several limitations to this approach, most importantly access to an appropriately steep traverse and sufficient relief to overcome uncertainties, and to have a broad enough range in closure ages as a function of elevation. Detrital thermochronology offers an alternative approach which can mitigate these challenges through coordinated dating of modern river sediments using multiple thermochronologic methods. Modern detrital sediments from active catchments provide an excellent source of material, typically rich in rock-forming and accessory minerals. Detrital thermochronologic data for material in sedimentary basins has been used widely to infer exhumation histories of sedimentary source terrains, reconstruct paleorelief, and evaluate spatial and temporal variations in erosion rates; however, there have been comparably fewer studies that apply this technique to evaluate regional exhumation patterns using detrital samples from active catchments. Based on the approach presented in Gallagher and Parra, (2020), we are exploring the capability of detrital thermochronologic data to infer regional exhumation patterns in the southeastern Sierra Nevada, CA. Here the uplift history remains debated and the potential mechanism of uplift has yet to be thoroughly constrained. Many catchments along the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada exhibit advantageous characteristics for detrital thermochronologic studies, including steep topography and high relief (that make it more difficult to sample bedrock), limited lithologic variability (which minimizes point-source biasing), relatively simple geologic structure, and relatively easy access to detrital sampling localities. Additionally, the dominant source of the southeastern Sierra Nevada catchments, the igneous units of the Sierra Nevada batholith, include abundant rock-forming minerals for 40Ar/39Ar thermochronology (hornblende, biotite, and sometimes muscovite) as well as abundant accessory minerals for (U-Th)/Pb geochronology(zircon), (U-Th)/Pb thermochronology (apatite), and (U-Th)/He thermochronology (zircon and apatite). Collectively, detrital thermochronological data from these minerals can elucidate much of the post-crystallization thermal history of the eastern flank of the Sierra Nevada. Preliminary results of this technique demonstrate the potential of this cost- and labor-efficient approach for exhumation history studies.

Matthijs van Soest

and 3 more

The Ultraviolet Laser Ablation Microprobe (UVLAMP) method of releasing helium from samples is an excellent, but under-utilized, tool in the diverse toolkit of gas extraction approaches available to researchers working with the (U-Th-Sm)/He thermochronology method. So far, most applications have involved some form of Laser Ablation (U-Th-Sm)/He dating (LAHe) or combined LAHe and Laser Ablation U-Th/Pb double dating (LADD) (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7). Other applications using UVLAMP have focused on 2D-mapping of helium distributions within zircon crystals (8) and stepwise Laser Ablation Depth Profiling (LADP) of induced helium diffusional loss profiles in apatite and zircon (9, 10). Based on the latter examples the stepwise helium LADP method would appear to be an excellent method to study the intricacies associated with a variety of aspects of the (U-Th-Sm)/He dating method and the interpretation and modeling of its results. Given that it creates high resolution helium profiles from the crystal margin to its core without the need to heat the sample to release the gas. Thus, it avoids issues of within-experiment radiation damage annealing, diffusional flattening of helium zonation, and/or the sudden release of helium from fluid and/or melt inclusions that can be associated with approaches using step heating of samples to acquire similar information about the helium distribution within a sample. In this contribution we focus on the results of high spatial resolution helium LADP experiments in a variety of accessory minerals (apatite, zircon, monazite, and titanite). The experiments are intended to a) empirically determine the alpha ejection distance and how those results compare to the distance for each mineral derived from SRIM calculations (11) and b) image natural helium distribution profiles from rim to core in zircons to produce data that are equivalent to those produced by 4He/3He thermochronology (12) experiments, but without the need to proton irradiate the sample. Initial LADP results on Durango apatite yielded an alpha ejection distance that is within error of the theoretical value, while results from several larger (>5 mm) zircon crystals did not yield profiles consistent with the presence of a straightforward alpha ejection zone. The helium depth profile results from the zircons were suggestive of either natural diffusional loss profiles, showing evidence of U-Th zoning, or a combination thereof. 1 Boyce et al. GCA 70, 2006; 2 Vermeesch et al. GCA 79, 2012; 3 Tripathy-Lang et al. JGR-ES 118, 2013; 4 Evans et al. JAAS 30, 2015; 5 Horne et al. GCA 178, 2016; 6 Horne et al. CG 506, 2019; 7 Pickering et al. CG 548, 2020; 8 Danisik et al. Sci Adv 3, 2017; 9 Van Soest et al. GCA 75, 2011; 10 Anderson et al. GCA 274, 2020; 11 Ziegler and Biersack, 1985; 12 Shuster and Farley EPSL 217, 2004.