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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

炭素14年代キャリブレーションと水月湖年縞堆積物

Kitagawa, Hiroyuki, 北川, 浩之 03 1900 (has links)
名古屋大学年代測定総合研究センターシンポジウム報告
2

Research on radiocarbon calibration records, focussing on new measurements from Lake Suigetsu, Japan

Staff, Richard Andrew January 2011 (has links)
Radiocarbon calibration is a fundamental stage of the radiocarbon dating process if meaningful calendar ages are to be derived from samples’ radiocarbon determinations. However, the present limit of direct, non-reservoir-corrected, atmospheric radiocarbon calibration is 12,550 calibrated years before present (Reimer et al. 2009), leaving approximately three quarters of the radiocarbon timescale to be necessarily calibrated via less secure marine records. The sediment profile of Lake Suigetsu, Honshu Island, central Japan, offers an ideal opportunity from which to derive an extended, ‘wholly terrestrial’ and continuous record of atmospheric radiocarbon back to the limits of radiocarbon detection (circa 60,000 years before present). The presence of well-defined, annually-deposited laminae (varves) throughout this extended time period provides an independent, high resolution chronometer against which radiocarbon measurements, performed upon plant macrofossil samples retrieved from the sediment column, can be directly related. This site was first exploited for radiocarbon calibration purposes by Kitagawa and van der Plicht (1998a, 1998b), however, issues pertaining to the reliability of the calendar age scale of this work precluded the widespread uptake of this dataset. The work presented in this DPhil thesis represents a significant contribution to the broader, ‘Suigetsu Varves 2006’ project – an international collaboration centring on the re-coring of Lake Suigetsu, which was undertaken in summer 2006 to improve upon the shortcomings of the previous project and, thereby, to fully exploit the site’s potential for both radiocarbon calibration and multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental study (Nakagawa et al. 2011). This DPhil thesis describes the generation of the revised (‘SG06’) terrestrial radiocarbon calibration dataset from Lake Suigetsu, comprising 647 accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon determinations, and extending across the complete range of the radiocarbon dating method. Furthermore, visual matching of archive SG93 core sections to the continuous SG06 sediment profile was undertaken, allowing the integration of the ≈ 300 radiocarbon determinations from the original Lake Suigetsu project into a higher resolution (≈ 900 radiocarbon measurements), combined Lake Suigetsu radiocarbon calibration dataset, providing a unique reconstruction of atmospheric radiocarbon across the entire radiocarbon dating timescale.
3

Reconstruction of high-resolution geological records and development of a method to identify sedimentary disturbance using Quaternary sedimentary cores from Beppu Bay and Lake Suigetsu, Japan / 別府湾及び水月湖の堆積物コアを用いた高分解能地質記録の復元と堆積擾乱の評価手法の開発

Yamada, Keitaro 23 March 2017 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(理学) / 甲第20188号 / 理博第4273号 / 新制||理||1614(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院理学研究科地球惑星科学専攻 / (主査)教授 竹村 惠二, 准教授 堤 浩之, 教授 林 愛明 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Science / Kyoto University / DGAM
4

The Chronology of Abrupt Climate Change and Late Upper Palaeolithic Human Adaptation in Europe

Blockley, S.P.E., Blockley, S.M., Donahue, Randolph E., Lane, C.S., Lowe, J.J., Pollard, A. Mark January 2006 (has links)
No / his paper addresses the possible connections between the onset of human expansion in Europe following the Last Glacial Maximum, and the timing of abrupt climate warming at the onset of the Lateglacial (Bölling/Allerød) Interstadial. There are opposing views as to whether or not human populations and activities were directly forced by climate change, based on different comparisons between archaeological and environmental data. We review the geochronological assumptions and approaches on which data comparisons have been attempted in the past, and argue that the uncertainties presently associated with age models based on calibrated radiocarbon dates preclude robust testing of the competing models, particularly when comparing the data to non-radiocarbon-based timescales such as the Greenland ice core records. The paper concludes with some suggestions as to the steps that will be necessary if more robust tests of the models are to be developed in the future.

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