4.4 Article

A new method for analyzing C-14 of methane in ancient air extracted from glacial ice

Journal

RADIOCARBON
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 53-73

Publisher

UNIV ARIZONA DEPT GEOSCIENCES
DOI: 10.1017/S0033822200043368

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We present a new method developed for measuring radiocarbon of methane ((CH4)-C-14) in ancient air samples extracted from glacial ice and dating 11,000-15,000 calendar years before present. The small size (similar to 20 mu g CH4 carbon), low CH4 concentrations ([CH4], 400-800 parts per billion [ppb]), high carbon monoxide concentrations ([CO]), and low C-14 activity of the samples created unusually high risks of contamination by extraneous carbon. Up to 2500 ppb CO in the air samples was quantitatively removed using the Sofnocat reagent. C-14 procedural blanks were greatly reduced through the construction of a new CH4 conversion line utilizing platinized quartz wool for CH4 combustion and the use of an ultra-high-purity iron catalyst for graphitization. The amount and C-14 activity of extraneous carbon added in the new CH4 conversion line were determined to be 0.23 +/- 0.16 pg and 23.57 +/- 16.22 pMC, respectively. The amount of modern (100 pMC) carbon added during the graphitization step has been reduced to 0.03 mu g. The overall procedural blank for all stages of sample handling was 0.75 0.38 pMC for similar to 20-mu g, C-14-free air samples with [CH4] of 500 ppb. Duration of the graphitization reactions for small (<25 mu g C) samples was greatly reduced and reaction yields improved through more efficient water vapor trapping and the use of a new iron catalyst with higher surface area. C-14 corrections for each step of sample handling have been determined. The resulting overall (CH4)-C-14 uncertainties for the ancient air samples are similar to 1.0 pMC.

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