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The technology allowed scholars a clearer and measurable view of the past,
clarifying the history of human migration, the rise and fall of civilisations,
and undulations of the earth’s climate
Innovation nexus: An accelerator mass spectrometer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
California, August 2007. - Photo: - Photo: Special Arrangement
VASUDEVAN MUKUNTH,
The technique called radiocarbon dating brought the first verifiable way to do this to
many fields of science, transforming them – and our world – to a significant degree.
Since cosmic rays are ceaselessly passing through the earth’s atmosphere, carbon-14
is created constantly there.
In the early 1940s, the American chemists Martin Kamen and Sam Ruben found a
way to synthesise carbon-14 in the lab as well as that its half-life – the time taken to
decay to half its original mass – was around 5,000 years, and not a few hours as
expected. In 1939, the Finnish-American physicist Serge Korff found that it’s possible
to produce carbon-14 by bombarding nitrogen-14 with neutrons – as cosmic rays do.
Inspired by these findings, the American physical chemist Willard Libby is credited
with conceiving the idea of using carbon-14 to date organic materials, which he
published in the journal Physical Review in 1946.
Notably, Libby’s idea made two assumptions that weren’t exactly known to be true at
the time.
Second, carbon-14, in the form of carbon dioxide and other carbon compounds,
would have to be able to diffuse into the earth’s various ecosystems such that the
concentration of carbon-14 in the atmosphere was comparable to the concentration
of carbon-14 in the planet’s other biospheres.
Some preliminary studies Libby conducted at the time, with his student Ernest
Anderson, indicated this was the case.
Fortunately for Libby, scientific studies that came later proved both these
assumptions to be valid.
When an organic entity – like the human body – is ‘alive’, it constantly exchanges
carbon with its surroundings by breathing, consuming food, defecating, shedding
skin, etc. Through these activities, carbon-14 is both lost from the body as well as
replenished, so its concentration in the body is nearly constant and in equilibrium
with its surroundings. When this individual dies, the body no longer performs these
activities and the concentration of carbon-14 in the body begins to dwindle through
radioactive decay.
The more time passes, the more the amount of carbon-14 lost, and the less there will
remain. This decay rate can be predicted from theory.
They found the technique could indeed estimate their ages correctly and published
their findings in the journal Science in 1949.
Since carbon-14 decays with a half-life of around 5,730 years, its presence can be
used to date samples that are around 60 millennia old.
Beyond that, the concentration of carbon-14 in the sample would have declined by
more than 99%.
The instrument of choice in Libby’s time to study radioactive decay was the Geiger
counter. It consists of a Geiger-Muller tube connected to some electronics that
interpret and display signals.
The Geiger-Muller tube contains a noble gas, such as helium or neon, and a rod
passing through the centre. A high voltage is maintained between the tube’s inner
surface and the rod.
The gas is insulating, so no current can pass between the two. But when energetic
particles (including gamma radiation), such as those emitted during radioactive
decay, pass through the gas, they can energise electrons in the gas’s atoms and
produce an electric discharge.
The persistent voltage could also encourage these electrons to knock off electrons in
more atoms, producing a bigger discharge (called the Townsend discharge). This
electric signal is relayed to the electronics, where, say, a light may come on in
response, indicating that radioactive decay is happening nearby.
Libby and his colleagues built on the Geiger counter to create a device called the
‘anti-coincidence counter’: a sample was surrounded by Geiger counters that had
been tuned to ignore the background level of radiation, and the setup was housed
inside thick shielding that further subtracted background radiation. To further
improve results, the team also purified the sample.
Scientists use ‘regular’ mass spectrometry to isolate ions that have the same mass-
to-charge ratio. They begin with a sample – say, a minuscule fragment of bone – and
bombard it with electrons to ionise its atoms.
Next, they subject the ions to different physical conditions that cause them to
separate according to their mass-to-charge ratio. For instance, they can be energised
by being accelerated and then deflected by electric or magnetic fields. Ions with
different mass-to-charge ratios are deflected to different extents.
AMS adds one more filter to this setup: a particle accelerator that energises the ions
a thousand-times more. As a result, isotope ions of the same mass and different ions
with the same mass-to-charge ratio also become more separable. In this way, all the
carbon-14 from a sample can be isolated and examined to estimate the bone
fragment’s age.
Geiger counters are available to purchase for a few tens of thousands of rupees and
can be operated by hand. Particle accelerators require specialised training and skill
as well as a few crore rupees, but their utility is equally disproportionate.
For example, AMS has allowed geologists to date rocks by measuring the relative
amounts of the strontium-87 isotope.
According to the American Chemical Society, “radiocarbon dating provided the first
objective dating method – the ability to attach approximate numerical dates to
organic remains”.
For this reason, its effects on the fields of archaeology and geology have come to be
called the “radiocarbon revolution”.
In essence, it allowed scholars a clearer and measurable view of the past, opening
the door to findings whose importance resonate to this day – including the history of
human migration, the rise and fall of civilisations, the birth of languages and
religions, the evolution of human-animal interactions, and undulations of the earth’s
climate.
Radiocarbon dating is also of political significance in India, where researchers and
politicians alike have invoked its use to date objects retrieved from temples and
mosques. Scientists have also continued to refine the technique and account for any
remaining flaws. For example, in 2018, archaeologists at Cornell University, New
York, reported evidence of the radiocarbon cycle deviating from the expected
version at certain points between 1610 and 1940.
As a result, they said, radiocarbon dating to these periods could be off by around 19
years.
In 2020, researchers from Cyprus, the Netherlands, and Russia reported a way to
improve the time resolution of radiocarbon dating – the smallest period of time to
which it could date objects – from decades to specific points within a year, using
“recent developments in atmospheric science“.