Supporting Information to Härtel et al. "Multi-band Raman analysis of radiation damage in zircon for thermochronology: Partial annealing and mixed signals" (2022), Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems

datacite.FundingReference.funderName
datacite.FundingReference.funderName

Europäische Union

Contributing person
datacite.contributor.ProjectLeader

Ratschbacher, Lothar (orcid: 0000-0001-9960-2084)

Documentation of the data
datacite.description.TechnicalInfo

Resource Type: Description of the samples and additional petrographic and geo-thermochronologic data. Methods: Thermochronologie

Description of the data
datacite.resourceType

This supporting information contains the sample information on the Myanmar data used in the main text, and the backgrounds of the modeling approach used for the inset in Figure 5. Supplement Texts S1, S2, and S3, Figures S1, S2, S3, and S4, Tables T1 and T2

Type of the data
datacite.resourceTypeGeneral

Text

Total size of the dataset
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1094429

Author
dc.contributor.author

Härtel, Birk

Author
dc.contributor.author

Ratschbacher, Lothar

Author
dc.contributor.author

Jonckheere, Raymond

Upload date
dc.date.accessioned

2021-12-21T20:39:39Z

Upload date
dc.date.accessioned

2026-06-08T12:24:30Z

Publication date
dc.date.available

2021-12-21T20:39:39Z

Publication date
dc.date.available

2026-06-08T12:24:30Z

Data of data creation
dc.date.created

2021

Publication date
dc.date.issued

2021-12-21

Abstract of the dataset
dc.description.abstract

Four zircon Raman bands were previously calibrated to give consistent estimates of the accumulated self-irradiation α-dose in unannealed volcanic samples. Partial annealing of radiation damage produces inconsistent values because the relative annealing sensitivities of the different bands differ from their relative accumulation rates. The damage estimate based on the external rotation band (DER) is the most sensitive and that based on the internal bending mode, ν2(SiO4) (D2), is the least sensitive to annealing. The D2/DER-ratio thus provides an estimate of the extent of annealing that a zircon sample has experienced. Further, it characterizes its Raman age and thermal history but also its state of radiation damage during its geologic history—and therefore—the manner in which this state influences other thermochronologic methods. Meaningful interpretation of the thermal signal and of the zircon Raman age requires that the spectra are free of measurement artifacts. The major artifacts result from micrometer-scale gradients of the damage densities within a zircon grain due to uranium and thorium zoning. The sampled volume may span different densities, producing overlapping spectra, causing apparent peak broadening, overestimated damage densities, and zircon Raman ages. The D3/D2-ratio calculated from the ν3(SiO4) and ν2(SiO4) bands, most and least affected by the overlap, is an efficient indicator of a meaningless signal. It reveals overlap in annealed and unannealed samples, because the ν2(SiO4) and ν3(SiO4) bands have similar responses to annealing. Multi-band Raman maps can be converted to damage-ratio maps for screening zircon mounts and for selecting suitable spots for thermochronologic investigations.

Public reference to this page
dc.identifier.uri

https://opara.zih.tu-dresden.de/handle/123456789/2571

Public reference to this page
dc.identifier.uri

https://doi.org/10.25532/OPARA-155

dc.language
dc.language

eng

Publisher
dc.publisher

Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg

Licence
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Attribution 4.0 International

URI of the licence text
dc.rights.uri

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Specification of the discipline(s)
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3::34

Title of the dataset
dc.title

Supporting Information to Härtel et al. "Multi-band Raman analysis of radiation damage in zircon for thermochronology: Partial annealing and mixed signals" (2022), Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems

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Texts S1, S2, S3, Tables T1 and T2

Underlying research object
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Minerals

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