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Berger, Glenn W. (1984) Thermoluminescence dating studies of glacial silts from Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 21 (12) 1393-1399 doi:10.1139/e84-144

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleThermoluminescence dating studies of glacial silts from Ontario
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsBerger, Glenn W.Author
Year1984 (December 1)Volume21
Issue12
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e84-144Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID478140Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:478140:4
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Full ReferenceBerger, Glenn W. (1984) Thermoluminescence dating studies of glacial silts from Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 21 (12) 1393-1399 doi:10.1139/e84-144
Plain TextBerger, Glenn W. (1984) Thermoluminescence dating studies of glacial silts from Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 21 (12) 1393-1399 doi:10.1139/e84-144
In(1984, December) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 21 (12) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes To develop procedures for the direct dating of glacially related silts by thermoluminescence (TL), I have applied previously proposed techniques to three polymineralic 4–11 μm samples from the Toronto area. Furthermore, one of these samples was studied in detail by isolating some mineral fractions. The principal conclusion is that the TL of the lodgment Halton Till (from Woodbridge) was not significantly reset during deposition, whereas the TL of the waterlaid upper Thorncliffe silt (from the Scarborough Bluffs) was reset, as was the TL of the third sample (WC-ST), a massive silt from Woodbridge that has been generally correlated with the glaciolacustrine Sunnybrook diamict at the Bluffs. This conclusion follows from the observation of feldspar TL apparent ages of >140 ka for the ~12 ka BP Halton Till and of 36 and 66 ka for the upper Thorncliffe and WC-ST samples, respectively.The four laboratory factors that contributed most to inaccuracies in the TL apparent ages were: (1) anomalous fading in the feldspar-dominant fractions, (2) nonlinearity in TL growth curves, (3) "overbleaching" of the TL, and (4) radon loss during alpha particle counting of dry powders. The effects of each of these have been circumvented or minimized. As expected, uncertainty in the past pore-water content represented the single largest source of imprecision for such TL apparent ages after correction for the other effects.


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