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Investigation into the OSL and TT-OSL signal characteristics of ancient (>100 ka) Tasmanian aeolian quartz and its utility as a geochronometer for understanding long-term climate-driven landscape change

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Abstract The luminescence characteristics and age estimates of nine samples of aeolian quartz are reported from the Southwood B section in the Arve Valley of southern Tasmania, Australia. New OSL… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The luminescence characteristics and age estimates of nine samples of aeolian quartz are reported from the Southwood B section in the Arve Valley of southern Tasmania, Australia. New OSL and TT-OSL ages obtained from the deepest Tasmanian aeolian section found so far, the Southwood B section (>6 m deep), range from 20 ka (MIS 2) to 180 ka (MIS 6). Here we test two previously published TT-OSL protocols on our samples: the protocol of Brown and Forman (2012) and a protocol modified from Stevens et al. (2009). Congruencies between our TT-OSL chronology, OSL chronology and previously published TL ages suggest that the modified Stevens et al. (2009) protocol is the most robust for these samples. Furthermore, detailed comparisons of the laboratory data for TL, OSL, and TT-OSL samples provide information on their signal characteristics, their utility as chronometers, and give insight into the bleaching histories of the deposits. All OSL and TT-OSL ages obtained from the Southwood B section fall below the upper dating limits of these signals, which are reported to be as high as ∼280 ka and ∼570 ka, respectively. The TT-OSL signal saturates at doses that are two to three times those of the OSL signal, and may not only provide a chronology for sediments deposited during MIS 5, but also, according to the saturation limits, for any preserved sediments that accumulated during MIS 6 through to MIS 15. TT-OSL ages from older sediments in this region, combined with further stratigraphic studies have the potential to determine the climatic history of Tasmania over multiple glacial periods.

Keywords: tasmanian aeolian; osl signal; osl osl; aeolian quartz; signal characteristics

Journal Title: Quaternary Geochronology
Year Published: 2019

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