EGU22-11178
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-11178
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Geochronologic methods for dating coral microatolls in the Philippines 

Andrew Mitchell1, Joanne Lim1, Anandh Gopal1, Aron Meltzner1, Andrew Chan2, Gina Sarkawi1, Xinnan Li1, Ace Matthew Cantillep3, Loraine Faye Sarmiento3, Junki Komori1,4, Tsai-Luen Yu5, Chuan-Chou Shen5, Shou-Yeh Gong6, Jennifer Weil-Accardo1, Kathrine Maxwell7, Ke Lin1,5, Yanbin Lu1, Xianfeng Wang1, and Noelynna Ramos3
Andrew Mitchell et al.
  • 1Nanyang Technological University, Earth Observatory of Singapore, Singapore
  • 2California Institute of Technology, United States of America
  • 3University of the Philippines, National Institute of Geological Sciences, Diliman, Philippines
  • 4University of Tokyo, Japan
  • 5National Taiwan University, Taiwan
  • 6National Museum of Natural Science, Taiwan
  • 7Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research, Germany

Coral microatolls allow for the reconstruction of relative sea level (RSL) and the inference of tectonic deformation along tropical coastlines over the Holocene. Microatolls track RSL with unparalleled vertical precision, and their annual banding allows us to count years precisely over an individual coral’s lifetime; however, RSL histories reconstructed from multiple corals depend on accurate and precise radiocarbon (14C) or uranium-thorium (230Th) ages.

We collected coral microatoll slabs from sites in Ilocos Region, northwestern Luzon, Philippines, and dated them with 14C and 230Th techniques. Notably, initial RSL reconstructions for some sites disagreed markedly depending on the dating technique used. Attempts to replicate geochronologic analyses have shown that the coral skeletons are susceptible to diagenesis, complicating efforts to accurately determine coral ages.

We are developing a strategy to overcome this limitation. We extracted multiple samples from each microatoll slab for paired 14C and 230Th dating. The number of annual bands separating any dated sample was used to further constrain the age of the coral; by subtracting the number of years from each dated sample, samples taken from different parts of the slab can produce independent estimates of the outermost preserved band. After excluding anomalously young replicate 14C ages and samples flagged as partly calcified by x-ray diffraction, we find that 230Th ages from a single coral disagree at 4σ in 4 of 8 cases, whereas calibrated 14C dates overlap at 2σ in 8 of 9 cases for an arbitrary radiocarbon marine reservoir correction, ∆R = 0 yr.

Using OxCal and the Marine20 calibration curve, we apply Bayesian statistics to combine 14C and 230Th ages, to estimate ∆R, and to determine the coral ages using the best available data. We further analyze the ∆R value for each coral, and account for overdispersion and underdispersion, whilst generating a ∆R value per site, and an overall ∆R value (inclusive of all sites). We find no statistically significant difference in ∆R for each site, and we calculate an overall ∆R of -155 ± 117 yr for sites in Ilocos Region since the mid-Holocene, though century-scale variability in ∆R may occur.

Additionally, to improve the reliability of our dates, our final dating strategy in OxCal is to apply the previously determined ∆R, to a code that places the corals in sequence (based on precise elevation measurements, morphological similarities, and coral die-down events), along with the 14C dates that are dated to the outermost preserved band.

How to cite: Mitchell, A., Lim, J., Gopal, A., Meltzner, A., Chan, A., Sarkawi, G., Li, X., Cantillep, A. M., Sarmiento, L. F., Komori, J., Yu, T.-L., Shen, C.-C., Gong, S.-Y., Weil-Accardo, J., Maxwell, K., Lin, K., Lu, Y., Wang, X., and Ramos, N.: Geochronologic methods for dating coral microatolls in the Philippines , EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-11178, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-11178, 2022.