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Inter-comparison of cosmogenic in-situ He, Ne and Cl at low latitude along an altitude transect on the SE slope of Kilimanjaro volcano (3°S, Tanzania)
Authors:Irene Schimmelpfennig  Alice Williams  Raphaël Pik  Pete Burnard  Samuel Niedermann  Robert Finkel  Björn Schneider  Lucilla Benedetti
Institution:aCRPG, UPR 2300 CNRS, Nancy Universités, 15 rue Notre Dame des Pauvres, 54501 Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France;bCEREGE, UMR 6635 CNRS, Université Paul Cézanne, Europôle de l’Arbois, 13545 Aix en Provence, France;cHelmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam – Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ, Telegrafenberg, 14473 Potsdam, Germany;dEarth and Planetary Science Department, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-4767, USA;eVrije Universiteit, Department of Isotope Geochemistry, de Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:Because the intensity and energy spectrum of the cosmic ray flux are affected by atmospheric depth and geomagnetic-field strength, cosmogenic nuclide production rates increase considerably with altitude and to a lesser degree with latitude. The scaling methods used to account for spatial variability in production rates assume that all cosmogenic nuclides have the same altitude dependence. In this study we evaluate whether the production rates of cosmogenic 36Cl, 3He and 21Ne change differently with altitude, which is plausible due to the different threshold energies of their production reactions. If so, nuclide-specific scaling factors would be required.Concentrations of the three cosmogenic nuclides were determined in mafic phenocrysts over an altitude transect between 1000 and 4300 m at Kilimanjaro volcano (3°S). Altitude dependence of relative production rates was assessed in two ways: by determination of concentration ratios and by calculation of apparent exposure age ratios for all nuclide pairs. The latter accounts for characteristics of 36Cl that the stable nuclides 3He and 21Ne do not possess (radioactive decay, high sensitivity to mineral composition and significant contributions from production reactions other than spallation). All ratios overlap within error over the entire transect, and altitudinal variation in relative production rates is not therefore evident. This suggests that nuclide-specific scaling factors are not required for the studied nuclides at this low-latitude location. However, because previous studies have documented anomalous altitude-dependent variations in 3He production at mid-latitude sites, the effect of latitude on cross-calibrations should be further evaluated.We determined cosmogenic 21Ne/3He concentration ratios of 0.1864 ± 0.0085 in pyroxenes and 0.377 ± 0.018 in olivines, agreeing with those reported in previous studies.Despite the absence of independently determined ages for the studied lava surfaces, the consistency in the dataset should enable progress to be made in the determination of the production rates of all three nuclides as soon as the production rate of one of the nuclides has been accurately defined.To our knowledge this is the first time that 36Cl has been measured in pyroxene. The Cl extraction method was validated by measuring 36Cl in co-existing plagioclase phenocrysts in one of the samples.
Keywords:Cosmogenic nuclides  Chlorine-36  Helium-3  Neon-21  Cross-calibration  Pyroxene  Olivine  Kilimanjaro  Altitude-dependent scaling
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