Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2023

Presentation information

[J] Online Poster

S (Solid Earth Sciences ) » S-CG Complex & General

[S-CG54] Evolution and movement of the crustal surface and application of geo- and thermochronology

Thu. May 25, 2023 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM Online Poster Zoom Room (5) (Online Poster)

convener:Noriko Hasebe(Institute of Nature and Environmental Technology, Kanazawa University), Shigeru Sueoka(Japan Atomic Energy Agency), Hisatoshi Ito(Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry), Takahiro Tagami(Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

On-site poster schedule(2023/5/25 17:15-18:45)

3:30 PM - 5:00 PM

[SCG54-P06] Etching of fission-track in Quaternary monazite samples

*Nakajima Toru1, Shoma Fukuda1, Sota Niki2, Shigeru Sueoka1, Tohru Danhara3, Tetsuo Kawakami4, Takahiro Tagami4 (1.Tono Geoscience Center, Japan Atomic Energy Agency, 2.Geochemical Research Centre, The University of Tokyo, 3.Kyoto Fission-Track Co., Ltd., 4.Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

Keywords:fission-track, thermochronology, monazite, Quaternary

We conducted monazite fission-track (MFT) etching experiments for Quaternary monazite dating. The MFT system is vulnerable to thermal annealing with a low closure temperature (~45-25℃: [1]), and thus, the MFT system is potentially applied to an ultra-low-temperature thermochronometer for age determinations on geological events occurring at ultra-low temperatures, such as shallow crustal denudation and faulting. [2] examined the etching conditions and suggested that the etching rate of monazite varies between grains depending mainly on the accumulated radiation damage. Etching conditions were examined by etching experiment of implanted tracks in pre-Mesozoic monazite [1][3], and re-examination of conditions using younger monazites with less radiation damage is required to establish more general conditions. In this study, we attempted to etch FTs of the Quaternary monazites, which have less radiation damage, to investigate appropriate etching conditions and discuss a relationship between the etching rate and radiation damage. The analyzed samples in this study were younger monazites from the Toya Ignimbrite (ca. 0.1 Ma: [4]) and the Kurobegawa Granite (ca. 0.8 Ma: [5]). For comparison, the Cretaceous monazite from the Kibe Granite (ca. 98 Ma: [6]) was also etched.
The FTs of these monazites were etched with 6 M HCl at 90℃ [2]. Spontaneous MFTs of the Kibe Granite appeared in the first 60 min, whereas no FTs were observed in monazites from the Toya Ignimbrite and the Kurobegawa Granite. Step-etching was performed until the diameter of an etch pit of MFT reached 1 µm, which took 90 min for the Kibe Granite and 600 min for the Kurobegawa Granite. Although FT-like structures were observed in the monazite from the Toya Ignimbrite, an etch pit did not reach 1 µm even after 600 min. This result indicates that the etching conditions proposed by [2] are insufficient for Quaternary monazite samples. On the other hand, except for extremely young samples such as the Toya Ignimbrite, it is possible to etch MFTs of young samples by performing additional etching for a longer time. As the time required for etching varies greatly from sample to sample, it is necessary to perform step etching to achieve proper etching and to determine the objective criteria for etching termination, similar to the zircon fission-track method [7].

REFERENCES
[1] Jones S, Gleadow A, Kohn B (2021) Geochronology 3:89–102.
[2] Jones S, Gleadow A, Kohn B, Reddy SM (2019) Terra Nova 2018:179–188.
[3] Weise C, van den Boogaart KG, Jonckheere R, Ratschbacher L (2009) Chem Geol 260:129–137.
[4] Niki S, Kosugi S, Iwano H, et al (2022) Geostand Geoanalytical Res 46:589–602.
[5] Ito H, Yamada R, Tamura A, et al (2013) Sci Rep 3:1–5.
[6] Skrzypek E, Kawakami T, Hirajima T, et al (2016) Lithos 260:9–27.
[7] Yamada R, Tagami T, Nishimura S (1995) Chem Geol 119:293–306.