posted on 2024-10-24, 03:38authored byMatej Lipar, M Barham, M Danišík, A Šmuc, John WebbJohn Webb, KJ McNamara, A Šoster, Mateja Ferk
Karst landforms provide insights into landscape evolution and paleoclimate but are inherently challenging to date. An ancient interval of particularly intense weathering of Western Australian Pleistocene aeolianites is recorded in a spectacular pinnacle karst landscape with associated ferricrete nodules. (U-Th)/He dating of the ferricrete nodules revealed an age of 102.8 + 10.6/-11.4 thousand years, corresponding to marine isotope stage 5c. The (U-Th)/He age thus directly dates the wettest interglacial period in the region over the last 500 thousand years, which was responsible for the dissolution that formed the pinnacles. The reliability of the ferricrete (U-Th)/He age is supported by bounding optically stimulated luminescence and U-Th dates on associated aeolianites and carbonate precipitates, respectively. A (U-Th)/He approach is globally applicable to aeolianites with associated ferricretes, allowing more accurate dating of the environmental changes affecting these lithologies, and temporally constraining rapid Pleistocene climatic oscillations to better contextualize the associated evolution of the biosphere.
Funding
This work was supported by Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency basic research project N1-0162 (M.L.), Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency basic research project J6-3142 (M.L.), Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency basic research project J6-50213 (M.L.), Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency research program P6-0101, Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency research program P1-0195, and Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency infrastructure program I0-0031.
History
Publication Date
2024-10-02
Journal
Science advances
Volume
10
Issue
40
Article Number
eadp0414
Pagination
9p.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science