Radioactive Methods of Determining the Age of Minerals and Rocks

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Alfred C. Lane
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
3
File Size:
1036 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1938

Abstract

WE recently received from Professor A. C. Lane, Emeritus Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, Tufts College, Mass., and a Corresponding Member of this Institute, a very interesting account of some recent developments in radioactive methods of determining the age of minerals and, therefore, of the rocks in which they occur. It deals in particular with studies of the minerals of certain pegmatite dykes on the Huron claims and Bear claims in southeastern Manitoba, which, the results indicate, are among the oldest rocks of the earth's crust. The following article presents a non-mathematical summary of Professor Lane's paper . . It will be noted that he is anxious to obtain suitable samples of certain minerals and rocks for further age studies. We hope some o our members may be able to supply him with the material he needs. It may be well to explain briefly how the age determinations are made. Uranium is continually breaking down, or disintegrating in successive steps through radium, etc., to a final product which is lead (uranium-lead), and the rate at which this change takes place is known. Minerals containing uranium will therefore contain lead also, and the lead-uranium ratio mul-tiplied by a certain factor (approximately 7 ,600) will give the age of the mineral in millions of years. Thorium also disintegrates at a known rate to give lead (thorium-lead) as a final product, and the age of a mineral containing thorium can thus be calculated from the lead-thorium ratio. Thorium breaks down more slowly than uranium. In unit time, one gram of thorium produces about as much lead as 0.36 grams of uranium.-ED.
Citation

APA: Alfred C. Lane  (1938)  Radioactive Methods of Determining the Age of Minerals and Rocks

MLA: Alfred C. Lane Radioactive Methods of Determining the Age of Minerals and Rocks. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1938.

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