Although development of radiometric methods led to the first and
principal breakthroughs in establishing an absolute time scale,
other absolute methods were devised that have limited applications.
Chief among these are dendrochronology, varve analysis, hydration
dating, and TL dating.
Dendrochronology
This method of dating events
and conditions of the recent past is based on the number, width,
and density of annual growth rings of long-lived trees. In the
southwestern United States, for example, a master tree-ring index
has been constructed from the Douglas fir and bristlecone pine.
This index enables dendrochronologists to date accurately events
and climatic conditions of the past 3000 to 4000 years.
Varve Analysis
One of the oldest
methods employed for absolute age determination, varve analysis,
was developed by Swedish scientists in the early 20th century.
A varve is a sedimentary bed, or sequence of beds, deposited in
a body of still water within a year's time. Counting and correlation
of varves have been used to measure the ages of Pleistocene glacial
deposits. By dividing the rate of sedimentation in terms of units
per year by the number of units deposited following a geologic
event, geologists can establish the age of the event in years.
Obsidian Hydration Dating
Also referred to as hydration
rind dating or obsidian dating, this method is used to calculate
ages in years by determining the thickness of rims (hydration
rinds) produced by water vapor slowly diffusing into freshly chipped
surfaces on artifacts made of obsidian, or recent volcanic, glass.
The method is applicable to glasses 200 to 200,000 years old.
Thermoluminescence (TL) Dating
This method is based on
the phenomenon of natural ionizing radiation inducing free electrons
in a mineral that can be trapped in defects of the mineral's crystal
lattice structure. These trapped electrons escape as TL when heated
to a temperature below incandescence, so that by recording the
TL of a mineral such as quartz and assuming a constant natural
radiation level, the last drainage of the trapped electrons can
be dated back to several hundred thousand years. In TL dating
of pottery, for example, the specimen is heated until it glows
with energy stored since it was fired. |