• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Simulating sedimentary burial cycles – Part 1: Investigating the role of apatite fission track annealing kinetics using synthetic data
  • Contributor: McDannell, Kalin T.; Issler, Dale R.
  • imprint: Copernicus GmbH, 2021
  • Published in: Geochronology
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.5194/gchron-3-321-2021
  • ISSN: 2628-3719
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:p>Abstract. Age dispersion is a common feature of apatite fission track (AFT) and apatite (U–Th) / He (AHe) thermochronological data, and it can be attributed to multiple factors. One underappreciated and underreported cause for dispersion is variability in apatite composition and its influence on thermal annealing of fission tracks. Using synthetic data we investigate how multikinetic AFT annealing behaviour, defined using the rmr0 parameter, can be exploited to recover more accurate, higher-resolution thermal histories than are possible using conventional interpretation and modelling approaches. Our forward model simulation spans a 2 Gyr time interval with two separate heating and cooling cycles and was used to generate synthetic AFT and AHe data for three different apatite populations with significantly different annealing kinetics. The synthetic data were then used as input for inverse modelling in the Bayesian QTQt software to recover thermal-history information under various scenarios. Results show that essential features of the dual peak thermal history are captured using the multikinetic AFT data alone, with or without imposed constraints. Best results are achieved when the multikinetic AFT data are combined with the AHe data and geologic constraint boxes are included. In contrast, a more conventional monokinetic interpretation that ignores multikinetic AFT behaviour reproduces all the input data but yields incorrect thermal-history solutions. Under these conditions, incorporation of constraints can be misleading and fail to improve model results. In general, a close fit between observed and modelled parameters is no guarantee of a robust thermal-history solution if data are incorrectly interpreted. For the case of overdispersed AFT data, it is strongly recommended that elemental data be acquired to investigate if multikinetic annealing is the cause of the AFT apparent age scatter. Elemental analyses can also be similarly useful for broadly assessing AHe data. A future companion paper (Issler et al., 2021) will explore multikinetic AFT methodology and application to detrital apatite samples from Yukon, Canada. </jats:p>
  • Access State: Open Access