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Absolute dating of Recent sediments in the cyclone-influenced shelf area off Bangladesh; comparison of gamma spectrometric ( (super 137) Cs, (super 210) Pb, (super 228) Ra), radiocarbon, and (super 32) Si ages.
Abstract
A geochronological survey of the Bengal shelf area involved results from more than 20 sediment cores dated using gamma spectrometry and the nuclides (super 137) Cs, (super 228) Ra, (super 226) Ra, and (super 210) Pb. In some cores, which contained older sediments, (super 32) Si and (super 14) C were determined to examine the possibility to extrapolate the obtained chronologies to century and millennial scale. Geochronological work in this region is faced with problems of cyclone-induced sediment reworking, grain-size effects on fallout nuclides, scarcity of carbonates, unknown (super 14) C reservoir effect and sedimentation rates that are too high to obtain sediment cores long enough to establish a chronology. Despite these problems, comparison between the results of the different dating methods provided the most reliable sediment balance to date for the submarine delta of the Ganges-Brahmaputra river system and indicated that on a time scale of several centuries at least 35% of the annual sediment load is deposited.
Keywords
gamma ray spectra;hurricanes;inner shelf;Ra 228;sediment transport;shelf environment;storm environment;continental shelf;Si 32;silicon;Bangladesh;Bay of Bengal;radium;lead;Pb 210;Indian Ocean;cesium;alkali metals;Cs 137;cores;marine environment;marine sediments;spectra;Holocene;alkaline earth metals;metals;sediments;Asia;Cenozoic;Quaternary;Indian Peninsula;C 14;carbon;dates;isotopes;radioactive isotopes;absolute age