Precision and accuracy in geochronology

Schoene, B., Condon, D. J., Morgan, L. E. and McLean, N. (2013) Precision and accuracy in geochronology. Elements, 9(1), pp. 19-24. (doi: 10.2113/gselements.9.1.19)

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Abstract

Geochronology in Earth and Solar System science is increasingly in demand, and this demand is not only for more results, but for more precise, more accurate, and more easily interpreted temporal constraints. Because modern research often requires multiple dating methods, scrupulous inter- and intramethod calibration in absolute time is required. However, improved precision has highlighted systematic analytical biases and uncovered geologic complexity that affects mineral dates. At the same time, both enhanced spatial resolution through microbeam geochronology and creative uses of disparate data sets to inform age interpretations have helped explain complexities in age data. Quantifying random and systematic sources of instrumental and geological uncertainty is vital, and requires transparency in methodology, data reduction, and reporting. Community efforts toward inter- and intracalibration of chronometers will continue to help achieve the highest possible resolving power for integrative geochronology.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Morgan, Dr Leah
Authors: Schoene, B., Condon, D. J., Morgan, L. E., and McLean, N.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre
Journal Name:Elements
Publisher:Mineralogical Association of Canada
ISSN:1811-5209
ISSN (Online):1811-5217

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