Events

Past Event

LDEO Earth Science Colloquium with Dr. Elizabeth Niespolo

February 9, 2024
3:30 PM - 4:30 PM
America/New_York
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, 61 Route 9W, Palisades, NY 10964 Monell Auditorium

The Earth Science Colloquium Series presents:

230Th/U burial dating of avian eggshells

with Dr. Elizabeth Niespolo, Assistant Professor of Geosciences, Princeton University.

Many Pleistocene archaeological and paleontological sites beyond the c. 50-thousand-year 14C limit remain poorly constrained in age or undated entirely. Many such deposits host giant avian eggshells, as large flightless birds producing giant eggs have resided on five continents in the Pleistocene and eggs served as a food source for foraging humans. Eggshells are furthermore made of calcite and are resistant to diagenesis compared to other biomineral compositions, making them potential candidates for uranium-series (230Th/U) geochronology; however, eggshells do not have primary U in them, rendering conventional 230Th/U dating ineffective. Laser ablation measurements that compare modern and ancient avian eggshells indicate that while modern eggshells have negligible U, ancient eggshells host significant concentrations of U and Th that vary with the eggshells’ petrographic structures. I’ll share a novel approach to dating eggshells, first tested with ostrich eggshells, called 230Th/U “burial dating”, which explicitly accounts for U in ostrich eggshell acquired from soil pore water upone burial. Resultant 230Th/U burial ages of ostrich eggshells from African archaeological sites preserve stratigraphic order and agree with independent dates. Laser ablation data of eggshells of the giant flightless birds of Pleistocene Australia corroborate that primary petrographic structures like those in ostrich eggshells control secondary uptake of U. 14C and 230Th/U data indicate that 230Th/U burial dating may apply to well-preserved eggshells of other avian taxa, providing a new way to date megafaunal remains in the Pleistocene. 

 

Host: Dr. Sidney Hemming, Professor, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences (DEES).

 

The Earth Science Colloquium Series, sponsored by Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and Columbia University Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences (DEES), provides a lively forum for discussing a wide variety of topics within the Earth sciences and related fields. Colloquia are attended by the full range of scientific and technical staff at LDEO. Colloquium attendance is required of all pre-orals DEES graduate students. The Colloquium Series supports the Lamont Seminar Diversity Initiative

Contact Information

Dr. Einat Lev