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MARINE RADIOCARBON RESERVOIR AGES IN SCOTTISH COASTAL AND FJORDIC WATERS

Alix G Cage, Jan Heinemeier, William N Austin

Abstract


High freshwater inputs into Scottish sea lochs (fjords) combined with the restricted exchange between sea loch

basin water and coastal Atlantic water masses are likely to result in reduced regional marine radiocarbon reservoir ages (R[t])

in these environments. To test this hypothesis, historical, museum-archived shells, collected live on known dates prior to

AD 1950 from coastal locations in NW Scotland, were 14C dated to provide a means of determining R(t) and hence the

regional deviation (ΔR) from the modeled global surface ocean reservoir age (R). The sea loch data, when combined with 14C

dates from the Scottish west coast (Harkness 1983), yield a regional ΔR value of 26 14 yr. The ΔR of sea loch (fjordic) and

coastal waters of NW Scotland are statistically different (at a confidence level >95%) from the ΔR value of 17 14 yr reported

for UK coastal waters (Reimer 2005; data after Harkness 1983) and are in good agreement with the coastal ΔR value of 33

93 yr reported by Reimer et al. (2002). Therefore, it is recommended that a regional ΔR correction of 26 14 yr should be

applied to modern (i.e. pre-bomb but not prehistoric) marine 14C dates from the NW coast of Scotland.

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