Geologic Time and the Time Scale


The Geologic Time Scale (from the Geological Society of America); this is the same one that I handed out in class. You will be responsible for the following information:

Here's another version of that table that also has information concerning what life forms were evolving at the particular time periods:
 
GEOLOGIC TIME 
EON ERA PERIODS AND
SYSTEMS
EPOCHS AND
SERIES 
BEGINNING OF
INTERVAL*
BIOLOGICAL FORMS 
Phanerozoic Cenozoic  Quaternary  Holocene

Pleistocene

0.01

1.8 

Earliest humans 
Tertiary Pliocene

Miocene

Oligocene

Eocene

Paleocene
 

5

24

37

58

65
 

Earliest hominids
 
 

Earliest grasses 

Earliest large 
mammals 

Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary (65 million years ago): extinction of dinosaurs 
Mesozoic Cretaceous  Upper

Lower
 

 

98

144
 

 

Earliest flowering 
plants;
dinosaurs in 
ascendance 
Jurassic
 

Triassic
 

208
 

245
 

Earliest birds 
& mammals

Age of Dinosaurs 
begins 

Paleozoic Permian

Carboniferous
(Pennsylvanian 
Mississippian)
 

Devonian
 
 
 

Silurian
 

Ordovician

Cambrian 

286
 

320
360
 

408
 
 
 

438
 

505

570 


 

Earliest reptiles
Earliest winged
insects

Earliest vascular
plants (as ferns 
& mosses) 
& amphibians

Earliest land plants
& insects

Earliest corals

Earliest fish 

Proterozoic Precambrian 2500  Earliest colonial
algae & soft bodied
invertebrates 
Archean 4000  Life appears;
earliest algae &
primitive bacteria 

* In millions of years before the present

The University of California at Berkeley's Museum of Paleontology has an excellent web page concerning the geologic time scale and its organization and development.


The question you should now ask, is how exactly did geologists develop the time scale and how did they assign the dates to the various subdivisions.

Geologists and paleontologists divided the Earth's geologic history into sections that had similar life forms and the breaks between divisions were based on major changes in life. Most of the divisions were made during the late 1800s. The bounding dates, however weren't added until much later - after the advent of radiometric age techniques.


Radiometric Dating

As mentioned during the first lecture or two, there are several different radiometric age dating techniques that can be used. All of these techniques rely on the fact that unstable isotopes of elements will decay at constant rates. Measuring the quantities of the radioactive element (the parent or the one that decays) and the stable end product (the daughter), as well as knowing the decay factor, allows geologist to calculate the age of the material.

Isotope: a form of an element which has the same number of protons and electrons in it, but a different number of neutrons.

E.g., all isotopes of carbon have 6 protons and 6 electrons. The various isotopes have different numbers of neutrons giving rise to the various isotopes, 12C, 13C, and 14C which have different atomic mass.

Isotopes are either stable (they do not spontaneously decay) or unstable (they will spontaneously decay by some type of nuclear decay process). C12, which is stable, comprises 98.89% of all carbon; 1.11% of all carbon is stable 13C; the remain trace amount of carbon is radioactive (unstable) 14C which is produced high in Earth's atmosphere when 14N gains one neutron after being hit by cosmic rays. The free 14C is quickly combined with oxygen to form CO2 which is used in respiration and food uptake by all organisms.

The 14C is unstable and will spontaneously break down into 14N and release energy. This relationship between unstable parent isotope and stable daughter occurs at a specific rate. For the 14C decay scheme, this happens once every 5730 years. This constant decay is known as the half-life of the isotope. Different unstable isotopes have different half-lives that are constant for that particular isotope.


Examples of radiometric age dating techniques on various materials

  1. 14C: Living organisms continually exchange carbon with the atmosphere through the process of photosynthesis. When the organism dies, however, exchange of carbon ceases and the carbon present in the organism becomes isolated. This event (death of the organism) marks the effective starting of the 14C clock. One of the most common types of material used in 14C dating is charcoal (e.g., trees burned during a volcanic eruption).
  2. Igneous Rocks:  These rocks form by the cooling and crystallization of magma or lava.  As cooling proceeds crystals grow. A growing crystal may trap small amounts of a radioactive isotope within its structure. When this occurs, the radioactive atoms become effectively isolated or trapped. Subsequent disintegration will produce daughter atoms replacing the original radioactive parents. Consequently, the process of cooling and crystallization starts the clock for igneous rocks. In many respects, igneous rocks are the easiest to date because the starting of the clocks are unambiguous.
  3. Sedimentary Rocks: Sedimentary rocks are, to a large degree, made from fragments of pre-existing rocks that have been broken, weathered, transported and ultimately deposited in ocean basins. These fragments (e.g., sand or mud) may become cemented together to form sedimentary rocks. The original source for the sediment may have been diverse, consisting of different rock types of different ages. Consequently, a sedimentary rock such as a sandstone or a shale is likely to consist of fragments of different age. Radiometric dating of sedimentary rocks is, therefore, not common.
  4. Metamorphic Rocks: These rocks typically form in deep levels of the crust, and consist of minerals that have formed in response to increasing temperature and pressure. If a new mineral grows in a metamorphic rock, and if that mineral incorporates radioactive isotopes in its crystal structure, then dating of that mineral can provide an estimate of the time of mineral growth (metamorphism). Most metamorphic rocks are very complex, and many have undergone several episodes of metamorphism and/or mineral growth over protracted periods of time. Radiometric dating of metamorphic rocks can be successful, but often the results are difficult to interpret, and in many cases are ambiguous.

The Radiometric Decay Equation

A constant-rate process such as radioactive decay is described by the simple equation:

dN/dt = -lN

where N is the number of radioactive parent atoms present, t is time and l (Greek lambda) is the radioactive decay constant (a number defining the probability that an atom will spontaneously decay in a given time period). In order to use this equation for decay over a given time period, we simply integrate from t = 0 to t, and from N0 to N (N0 gives the number of parent atoms at time zero). Integrating, we have:

N = N0 e-lt

The equation above is known as the decay equation. It shows that at any time t, the number of parent atoms, N, is equal to the number of original parent atoms at time zero, multiplied by the natural exponent raised to the negative power of the decay constant (l) multiplied by the time (t).


Relationship of l to half-life

The decay equation can be used to show the relationship of the decay constant l to the half-life of any unstable isotope. To do this we simply substitute (in the decay equation) t = t1/2 and N = N0/2:

1/2 = e-lt1/2

or

t1/2 = ln 2/l = 0.69315/l


Okay, so now that we know the decay equations, how do we date a rock?

The decay equation shown above constitutes the basis for determining the absolute ages of appropriate rocks and/or minerals. I use the term "appropriate" in the sense that the specimen to be dated must obviously contain isotopes of a well known radioactive decay series, and be suitable for precise chemical analysis. In the simplest ideal situation, the decay equation is utilized by making the following substitutions:

P = N (# of parent atoms currently present as measured in the lab)

P0 = N0 (# of original parents at time zero) Note that this is an unknown

D = P0 - P (# of daughter atoms present as measured in the lab)

If we assume for the moment (more on this later) that no daughters were present at time zero, then:

P0 = P + D and:

P = (P + D) e-lt

or

D = P(e-lt - 1)

which can be arranged as:

t = 1/l ln(1 + D/P)

Therefore, if we know the decay constant (l) and can accurately measure D and P, in principle, we can determine the absolute age.

Accurate measurement of either the absolute or relative abundance of trace quantities of radioactive isotopes requires sophisticated instruments, known as mass spectrometers, and instrument operators who really know what they are doing. The technique appears to be simple and straightforward, but is actually very difficult and time-consuming. Depending on the system and the specimens, reliable age determinations can take months to be made and can cost up to $1,000. It is not a trivial task!


The Problem of Initial Parent/Daughter Ratios

The simplified application of the decay equation presented above, bases age determinations on measurement of the ratio of parent:daughter isotopes. The fundamental assumption in this simplified approach is that there existed no daughter atoms at the time the radiometric clock started. This assumption is in many cases not valid, as daughter atoms certainly existed in the mineral or rock at the time the radiometric clock started. The solution to this problem can be illustrated using the Rubidium (Rb) - Strontium (Sr) system.

Rubidium exists as stable Rb85 and unstable Rb87. Rb87 decays to Sr87 by beta decay (same as C14), with a half-life of 50Ga. Strontium has four isotopes [Sr84, Sr86, Sr87 and Sr88]. Sr87 in a given rock may have been produced by the decay of Rb87 or it may have been present initially as part of the total Sr incorporated before any radioactive decay.

With Sr87 as the daughter and Rb87 as the parent, the decay equation presented above is:

Sr87 = Rb87 (e-lt - 1)

If some Sr87 was initially present, the total amount of Sr87 present is given by the following:

Sr87total = Sr87initial + Rb87 (e-lt - 1)

The solution around the problem can be attained by using ratios, instead of absolute abundance:

Sr87/Sr86= (Sr87/Sr86)initial + (Rb87/Sr86) (e-lt - 1)


The figure to the left shows such an example of using the ratios of Sr87/Sr86 and Rb87/Sr86. The rock dated is from the Apollo Lunar mission, as is a basalt from a Mare basin. Three minerals were analyzed - ilmenite (Ilm), pyroxene (Px) and plagioclase feldspar (Plag). In addition the whole rock (WR) was analyzed. All four point fall on a straight line known as an isochron (meaning same age). The intercept on the Y axis gives the initial ratio of Sr87/Sr86. The slope of the isochron is given by (e-lt -1), and from this slope the age is determined to be 3.09Ga.


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Please direct comments about this page to John Stimac
URL http://www.ux1.eiu.edu/~cfjps/1300/time.html
Revised 9/6/99
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