K–Ar dating


Potassium–argon dating, abbreviated K–Ar dating, is a radiometric dating method used in geochronology and archaeology. It is based on measurement of the product of the radioactive decay of an isotope of potassium into argon. Potassium is a common element found in many materials, such as micas, clay minerals, tephra, and evaporites. In these materials, the decay product is able to escape the liquid rock, but starts to accumulate when the rock solidifies. The amount of argon sublimation that occurs is a function of the purity of the sample, the composition of the mother material, and a number of other factors. These factors introduce error limits on the upper and lower bounds of dating, so that final determination of age is reliant on the environmental factors during formation, melting, and exposure to decreased pressure and/or open-air. Time since recrystallization is calculated by measuring the ratio of the amount of accumulated to the amount of remaining. The long half-life of allows the method to be used to calculate the absolute age of samples older than a few thousand years.
The quickly cooled lavas that make nearly ideal samples for K–Ar dating also preserve a record of the direction and intensity of the local magnetic field as the sample cooled past the Curie temperature of iron. The geomagnetic polarity time scale was calibrated largely using K–Ar dating.

Decay series

Potassium naturally occurs in 3 isotopes: , , . and are stable. The isotope is radioactive; it decays with a half-life of to Calcium-40| and Argon-40|. Conversion to stable occurs via electron emission in 89.3% of decay events. Conversion to stable occurs via electron capture in the remaining 10.7% of decay events.
Argon, being a noble gas, is a minor component of most rock samples of geochronological interest: It does not bind with other atoms in a crystal lattice. When decays to ; the atom typically remains trapped within the lattice because it is larger than the spaces between the other atoms in a mineral crystal. But it can escape into the surrounding region when the right conditions are met, such as change in pressure and / or temperature. atoms are able to diffuse through and escape from molten magma because most crystals have melted and the atoms are no longer trapped. Entrained argon – diffused argon that fails to escape from the magma – may again become trapped in crystals when magma cools to become solid rock again. After the recrystallization of magma, more will decay and will again accumulate, along with the entrained argon atoms, trapped in the mineral crystals. Measurement of the quantity of atoms is used to compute the amount of time that has passed since a rock sample has solidified.
Despite being the favored daughter nuclide, it is rarely useful in dating because calcium is so common in the crust, with being the most abundant isotope. Thus, the amount of calcium originally present is not known and can vary enough to confound measurements of the small increases produced by radioactive decay.

Formula

The ratio of the amount of to that of is directly related to the time elapsed since the rock was cool enough to trap the Ar by the equation
where
The scale factor 0.109 corrects for the unmeasured fraction of which decayed into ; the sum of the measured and the scaled amount of gives the amount of which was present at the beginning of the elapsed time period. In practice, each of these values may be expressed as a proportion of the total potassium present, as only relative, not absolute, quantities are required.

Obtaining the data

To obtain the content ratio of isotopes to in a rock or mineral, the amount of Ar is measured by mass spectrometry of the gases released when a rock sample is volatilized in vacuum. The potassium is quantified by flame photometry or atomic absorption spectroscopy.
The amount of is rarely measured directly. Rather, the more common is measured and that quantity is then multiplied by the accepted ratio of /.
The amount of is also measured to assess how much of the total argon is atmospheric in origin.

Assumptions

According to the following assumptions must be true for computed dates to be accepted as representing the true age of the rock:
Both flame photometry and mass spectrometry are destructive tests, so particular care is needed to ensure that the aliquots used are truly representative of the sample. Ar–Ar dating is a similar technique which compares isotopic ratios from the same portion of the sample to avoid this problem.

Applications

Due to the long half-life of, the technique is most applicable for dating minerals and rocks more than 100,000 years old. For shorter timescales, it is unlikely that enough will have had time to accumulate in order to be accurately measurable. K–Ar dating was instrumental in the development of the geomagnetic polarity time scale. Although it finds the most utility in geological applications, it plays an important role in archaeology. One archeological application has been in bracketing the age of archeological deposits at Olduvai Gorge by dating lava flows above and below the deposits. It has also been indispensable in other early east African sites with a history of volcanic activity such as Hadar, Ethiopia. The K–Ar method continues to have utility in dating clay mineral diagenesis. In 2017, the successful dating of illite formed by weathering was reported. This finding indirectly lead to the dating of the strandflat of Western Norway where the illite was sampled from. Clay minerals are less than 2 μm thick and cannot easily be irradiated for Ar–Ar analysis because Ar recoils from the crystal lattice.
In 2013, the K–Ar method was used by the Mars Curiosity rover to date a rock on the Martian surface, the first time a rock has been dated from its mineral ingredients while situated on another planet.