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Table of Contents Noble Gases in Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry, Vol. 47 1 An Overview of Noble Gas Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry D. Porcelli, C. J. Ballentine, R. Wieler INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................... 1 NOBLE GAS MASS SPECTROMETRY ...................................................................................... 2 THE ATMOSPHERIC STANDARD ............................................................................................. 2 PRODUCTION OF NOBLE GAS ISOTOPES .............................................................................. 4 BEHAVIOR OF THE NOBLE GASES.......................................................................................... 5 Water, natural gas, and oil partitioning ......................................................................................6 Silicate melt solubilities ............................................................................................................. 6 Crystal-melt partitioning ............................................................................................................ 6 Iron-silicate partitioning............................................................................................................. 6 Adsorption ................................................................................................................................. 6 Diffusion .................................................................................................................................... 7 Atmosphere losses ..................................................................................................................... 7 NOBLE GASES IN COSMOCHEMICAL AND GEOCHEMICAL STUDIES ............................ 7 Noble gases in cosmochemistry ................................................................................................. 8 Noble gases in the mantle ........................................................................................................ 10 Noble gases in surface reservoirs ............................................................................................. 11 Noble gases and geochronology .............................................................................................. 13 END NOTE ................................................................................................................................... 14 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ............................................................................................................. 14 REFERENCES .............................................................................................................................. 14 APPENDIX I ................................................................................................................................. 18 Noble Gases in the Solar System 2 71 Noble Gases in the Solar System Rainer Wieler INTRODUCTION ..........................................................................................................................21 ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES ....................................................................................................21 THE SUN .......................................................................................................................................23 Solar noble gas abundances .....................................................................................................23 Helium in the Sun ....................................................................................................................26 Noble gases in the solar corpuscular radiation.........................................................................27 THE GIANT PLANETS ................................................................................................................36 The He abundances ..................................................................................................................36 The Ne-Xe abundances in Jupiter ............................................................................................39 Isotopic ratios in Jupiter ...........................................................................................................40 VENUS...........................................................................................................................................42 THE MOON ...................................................................................................................................43 Trapped solar (and other) noble gases in the lunar (and asteroidal) regoliths .........................43 Nitrogen in lunar samples ........................................................................................................52 Cosmogenic noble gases in lunar samples ...............................................................................53 THE EXOSPHERES OF THE MOON AND MERCURY............................................................55 Sources and sinks .....................................................................................................................57 COMETS ........................................................................................................................................58 INTERPLANETARY DUST PARTICLES AND MICROMETEORITES ..................................59 ELEMENTARY PARTICLES IN INTERPLANETARY SPACE ................................................61 Galactic cosmic rays ................................................................................................................61 Interstellar and interplanetary pick-up ions .............................................................................62 Anomalous cosmic rays ...........................................................................................................63 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ..............................................................................................................63 REFERENCES ...............................................................................................................................63 3 Noble Gases in Meteorites – Trapped Components Ulrich Ott OVERVIEW AND HISTORICAL ............................................................................................... 71 ELEMENTAL ABUNDANCE PATTERNS ................................................................................ 73 ISOTOPIC COMPOSITIONS....................................................................................................... 74 Helium .................................................................................................................................... 75 Neon ........................................................................................................................................ 76 Argon ...................................................................................................................................... 77 Krypton ................................................................................................................................... 78 Xenon ...................................................................................................................................... 80 ORIGINS AND HISTORY ........................................................................................................... 82 Q(P1)-gases ............................................................................................................................. 83 Gases in presolar silicon carbide and graphite ........................................................................ 84 Gases trapped in presolar diamond (HL, P3 and P6 components) .......................................... 87 Ureilite gases........................................................................................................................... 89 Subsolar and sub-Q gases ....................................................................................................... 89 Sitings ..................................................................................................................................... 90 Other (lesser) components ...................................................................................................... 90 RELATIONS ................................................................................................................................. 91 Relationship between Q and solar gases ................................................................................. 91 A more primitive component (in Xe and only in Xe?) ........................................................... 94 CONCLUDING REMARKS ........................................................................................................ 96 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ............................................................................................................. 96 REFERENCES .............................................................................................................................. 96 4 Noble Gases in the Moon and Meteorites: Radiogenic Components and Early Volatile Chronologies Timothy D. Swindle INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 101 LONG-LIVED NUCLIDES: CHRONOLOGY OF SOLAR SYSTEM EVOLUTION ............. 102 Solar system impact history ................................................................................................... 103 Extinct radionuclides: Chronology of solar system formation .............................................. 108 Iodine-xenon .......................................................................................................................... 109 244 Plutonium ........................................................................................................................... 117 Other fissioning nuclides?...................................................................................................... 120 Other radiogenic noble gases ................................................................................................. 120 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 121 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 121 5 Cosmic-Ray-Produced Noble Gases in Meteorites Rainer Wieler INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................125 THE PRODUCTION OF COSMOGENIC NUCLIDES IN METEORITES ..............................126 Fundamentals ......................................................................................................................... 126 Production systematics........................................................................................................... 128 Cosmogenic noble gases produced by capture of low-energy neutrons ................................ 139 Isotopic abundances of cosmogenic noble gases ................................................................... 141 EXPOSURE AGE DISTRIBUTIONS OF METEORITES .........................................................144 Undifferentiated meteorites ................................................................................................... 146 Differentiated meteorites ....................................................................................................... 149 Exposure ages and dynamical models of meteorite delivery ................................................. 153 COMPLEX EXPOSURE HISTORIES ........................................................................................155 THE COSMIC RAY FLUX IN TIME .........................................................................................159 TERRESTRIAL AGES ................................................................................................................161 COSMOGENIC NOBLE GASES PRODUCED BY SOLAR COSMIC RAYS (SCR)..............162 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ............................................................................................................162 REFERENCES .............................................................................................................................163 6 Martian Noble Gases Timothy D. Swindle STUDYING MARS AS ANOTHER PLANET .......................................................................... 171 DISCOVERY OF MARTIAN METEORITES........................................................................... 171 MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE ....................................................................................................... 175 OTHER MARTIAN NOBLE GAS RESERVOIRS ................................................................... 180 Martian interior (Chassigny) ................................................................................................. 180 Other reservoirs I: Nakhlite (and ALH84001) Xe ................................................................ 181 Other reservoirs II: Shergottite Ar ........................................................................................ 182 Paleoatmosphere ................................................................................................................... 182 MARTIAN CHRONOLOGY ..................................................................................................... 183 40 Ar-39Ar dating..................................................................................................................... 184 Cosmic-ray exposure ages .................................................................................................... 185 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 187 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 187 7 Origin of Noble Gases in the Terrestrial Planets Robert O. Pepin, Donald Porcelli INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 191 CHARACTERISTICS OF PLANETARY NOBLE GASES ...................................................... 193 Planetary noble gas abundance patterns ............................................................................... 193 Terrestrial noble gases .......................................................................................................... 196 Noble gases on Venus ........................................................................................................... 205 Noble Gases on Mars ............................................................................................................ 206 ACQUISITION OF PLANETARY NOBLE GASES ................................................................. 208 Early post-nebular solar wind ............................................................................................... 209 Adsorption on pre-planetary grains or protoplanetary bodies .............................................. 210 Gravitational capture ............................................................................................................. 210 Accretion of volatile-rich planetesimals ............................................................................... 213 LOSSES AND MODIFICATIONS OF PLANETARY NOBLE GASES .................................. 216 Losses during accretion......................................................................................................... 216 Sputtering .............................................................................................................................. 217 Hydrodynamic escape ........................................................................................................... 218 Primordial xenon................................................................................................................... 231 OUTSTANDING ISSUES .......................................................................................................... 235 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 239 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 239 8 Noble Gas Isotope Geochemistry of Mid-Ocean Ridge and Ocean Island Basalts: Characterization of Mantle Source Reservoirs David W. Graham INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 247 BACKGROUND ......................................................................................................................... 249 Noble gas chemical behavior ................................................................................................ 249 Mantle structure and noble gases .......................................................................................... 252 HELIUM ..................................................................................................................................... 254 Significance .......................................................................................................................... 254 Radiogenic production .......................................................................................................... 255 Mid-ocean ridge basalts ........................................................................................................ 255 Ocean island basalts .............................................................................................................. 265 NEON .......................................................................................................................................... 279 Significance .......................................................................................................................... 279 Nucleogenic production ........................................................................................................ 279 Mid-ocean ridge basalts ........................................................................................................ 281 Ocean island basalts .............................................................................................................. 283 ARGON ....................................................................................................................................... 284 Significance .......................................................................................................................... 284 Radiogenic production .......................................................................................................... 284 Atmospheric contamination .................................................................................................. 284 Mid-ocean ridge basalts ........................................................................................................ 285 Ocean island basalts .............................................................................................................. 288 KRYPTON .................................................................................................................................. 289 XENON ....................................................................................................................................... 289 Significance .......................................................................................................................... 289 Radiogenic production .......................................................................................................... 290 Mid-ocean ridge basalts ........................................................................................................ 291 Ocean island basalts .............................................................................................................. 292 COUPLED RADIOGENIC/NUCLEOGENIC PRODUCTION ................................................. 293 Neon-helium systematics ...................................................................................................... 293 Argon-helium systematics .................................................................................................... 297 Xenon-neon-helium systematics ........................................................................................... 300 MANTLE ABUNDANCE PATTERNS OF NOBLE GASES ................................................... 301 PRINCIPAL OBSERVATIONS ................................................................................................. 302 SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................ 303 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 305 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 305 9 Noble Gases and Volatile Recycling at Subduction Zones David R. Hilton, Tobias P. Fischer, Bernard Marty INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 319 SAMPLING FOR NOBLE GASES ............................................................................................ 320 Volcanic and geothermal fluids ............................................................................................ 320 Hot spring waters and groundwaters..................................................................................... 321 Geothermal wells .................................................................................................................. 322 Natural gases ......................................................................................................................... 322 Mafic phenocrysts and xenoliths .......................................................................................... 322 Submarine glasses ................................................................................................................. 323 Problematic issues of noble gas analysis .............................................................................. 323 NOBLE GAS SYSTEMATICS OF ARC-RELATED VOLCANISM ....................................... 324 Helium isotope systematics of arc-related volcanism ........................................................... 325 Neon and argon isotope systematics of arc-related volcanism ............................................. 330 Krypton and xenon isotope systematics of arc-related volcanism ........................................ 333 Relative noble gas abundance systematics of arc-related volcanism .................................... 333 NOBLE GASES IN BACK-ARC BASINS ................................................................................ 334 Helium isotopes in back-arc basins ....................................................................................... 334 Neon isotopes in back-arc basins .......................................................................................... 337 Argon, krypton and xenon isotopes in back-arc basins ........................................................ 338 RECYCLING OF VOLATILES AT SUBDUCTION ZONES: A MASS BALANCE APPROACH ......................................................................................... 340 The global volatile output at arc volcanoes: The 3He approach............................................ 340 Volatile output at individual arcs—SO2 and the power law distribution .............................. 341 Using helium to resolve volatile provenance ........................................................................ 349 Problematic issues regarding estimates of volatile output at arcs ......................................... 351 Volatile output at the back-arc and fore-arc regions ............................................................. 352 The volatile input via the trench ........................................................................................... 353 Volatile mass balance at subduction zones ........................................................................... 355 Global implications of volatile recycling at subduction zones ............................................. 358 SUMMARY AND FUTURE WORK ......................................................................................... 361 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 362 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 362 10 Storage and Transport of Noble Gases in the Subcontinental Lithosphere Tibor J. Dunai, Donald Porcelli INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 371 SUBCONTINENTAL MANTLE AS GEOCHEMICAL RESERVOIR .................................... 372 Thickness of the lithosphere ................................................................................................. 372 Composition of the lithosphere ............................................................................................. 373 Age of the lithosphere ........................................................................................................... 374 Possible xenolith noble gas components............................................................................... 374 NOBLE GASES IN ULTRAMAFIC XENOLITHS AND PHENOCRYSTS............................ 377 Fluid inclusions as hosts for noble gases .............................................................................. 377 Helium isotopic variations .................................................................................................... 381 He-Sr relationships ............................................................................................................... 382 He-C relationships ................................................................................................................ 384 The heavier noble gases ........................................................................................................ 386 Regional studies of the sources of xenolith mantle rare gases .............................................. 388 The mantle sources of xenolith He ....................................................................................... 394 Introducing He into the lithosphere ...................................................................................... 396 DIAMONDS ............................................................................................................................... 397 Ancient He ............................................................................................................................ 398 Ancient Xe ............................................................................................................................ 399 Mantle sources of diamond rare gases .................................................................................. 399 MANTLE VOLATILES IN THE CONTINENTAL CRUST .................................................... 400 CONCLUSIONS ......................................................................................................................... 400 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 401 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 401 11 Models for Distribution of Terrestrial Noble Gases and Evolution of the Atmosphere D. Porcelli, C.J. Ballentine INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 411 RADIOGENIC COMPONENTS IN THE BULK EARTH AND ATMOSPHERE ................... 412 Radiogenic He and nucleogenic Ne ...................................................................................... 412 Radiogenic Ar ....................................................................................................................... 414 Radiogenic and fissiogenic Xe.............................................................................................. 415 MANTLE NOBLE GAS CHARACTERISTICS ........................................................................ 419 Helium isotopic compositions in the mantle ......................................................................... 419 Neon isotopic compositions in the mantle ............................................................................ 420 Argon isotopic compositions in the mantle........................................................................... 423 Xe isotopes and a nonresidual upper mantle ......................................................................... 427 Mantle noble gas relative abundances .................................................................................. 428 Noble gas fluxes and mantle concentrations ......................................................................... 430 Undepleted mantle ................................................................................................................ 434 Coupled degassing of noble gases ........................................................................................ 435 TRACE ELEMENT ISOTOPE CONSTRAINTS ON MANTLE RESERVOIRS ..................... 436 Relationship between noble gases and radiogenic isotopes .................................................. 436 Mass and character of the depleted mantle ........................................................................... 436 Timing of mantle depletion and recycling ............................................................................ 438 PHYSICAL CONSTRAINTS ON MANTLE MODELS ........................................................... 438 Mantle reservoirs .................................................................................................................. 438 Geophysical evidence for the scale of mantle convection .................................................... 439 Early Earth history ................................................................................................................ 443 NOBLE GAS MANTLE MODELS ............................................................................................ 446 Single reservoir degassing .................................................................................................... 446 Limited Interaction Box models ........................................................................................... 448 Steady state box models ........................................................................................................ 452 Break-up of a previously layered mantle .............................................................................. 457 The lower boundary layer reservoir ...................................................................................... 457 The upper boundary layer reservoir ...................................................................................... 459 Deeper or ‘abyssal’ layering ................................................................................................. 459 Heterogeneities preserved within the convecting mantle...................................................... 460 Depleted, high He/U mantle ................................................................................................. 462 Storage of noble gases in the core......................................................................................... 463 Subduction of meteoritic He ................................................................................................. 465 CONCLUSIONS ......................................................................................................................... 466 Overall assessment of the models ......................................................................................... 466 Some persistent misconceptions ........................................................................................... 467 Important parameters that are still unknown......................................................................... 468 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 469 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 469 12 Production, Release and Transport of Noble Gases in the Continental Crust Chris J. Ballentine, Pete G. Burnard INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 481 RADIOGENIC, NUCLEOGENIC, AND FISSIOGENIC NOBLE GASES .............................. 482 The subsurface neutron flux and reaction probability .......................................................... 482 Helium .................................................................................................................................. 487 Neon ...................................................................................................................................... 490 Argon .................................................................................................................................... 495 Krypton and xenon................................................................................................................ 498 Cosmogenic noble gas production ........................................................................................ 501 Interplanetary dust accumulation .......................................................................................... 503 Production rates in continental crust today and over the history of the Earth ...................... 504 RELEASE OF NOBLE GASES FROM MINERALS IN THE CRUST .................................... 506 Recoil loss ............................................................................................................................. 506 Diffusive loss from minerals ................................................................................................. 509 Mineral breakdown/diagenesis/metamorphism/alteration .................................................... 512 TRANSPORT OF NOBLE GASES FROM THE DEEP CRUST TO SHALLOW-LEVEL SYSTEMS ....................................................................................... 514 Diffusion: A viable transport mechanism to degas the continental Crust? ........................... 515 Differential release and transport of helium and argon ......................................................... 517 Accumulation and release: Fluid flow in the Crust............................................................... 519 HEAT AND HELIUM ................................................................................................................ 521 The relationship between 4He and heat ................................................................................. 521 Transport of mantle heat and helium through the crust ........................................................ 521 Transport of crustal heat and 4He .......................................................................................... 524 MAGMATIC NOBLE GASES IN THE CRUST ....................................................................... 525 Tectonic control on magmatic fluid location ........................................................................ 525 Fossil magmatic gases........................................................................................................... 529 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 529 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 529 Tracing Fluid Origin, Transport and Interaction in the Crust 13 615 Tracing Fluid Origin, Transport and Interaction in the Crust Chris J. Ballentine, Ray Burgess, Bernard Marty INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 539 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY OF NOBLE GASES IN CRUSTAL FLUIDS ................................ 540 Henry’s law and the assumption of ideality ........................................................................... 540 Non-ideality in the gas phase ................................................................................................. 541 Non-ideality in the fluid phase...............................................................................................544 Noble gas solubility in water and oil ..................................................................................... 546 PHASE EQUILIBRIUM AND FRACTIONATION OF NOBLE GASES ................................ 548 Liquid-gas phase partitioning of noble gases......................................................................... 548 Liquid-liquid phase partitioning of noble gases.................................................................... 549 Relative fractionation ............................................................................................................. 550 Rayleigh fractionation............................................................................................................ 551 Re-solution and effervescence ............................................................................................... 555 Multiple subsurface fluid phases ........................................................................................... 558 Diffusion or kinetic fractionation...........................................................................................559 RESOLVING DIFFERENT NOBLE GAS COMPONENTS IN CRUSTAL FLUIDS ............. 562 NOBLE GASES IN HYDROCARBON GAS AND OIL RESERVOIRS.................................. 565 Identifying and quantifying groundwater/gas/oil interaction ................................................ 567 Case studies............................................................................................................................ 569 NOBLE GASES IN ANCIENT GROUNDWATERS AND CRUSTAL DEGASSING ............ 581 Sources of He isotopes in groundwaters ................................................................................ 582 Deep aquifers and the crustal He flux .................................................................................... 584 Advective versus diffusive transfer of noble gases in basins ................................................. 590 Tentative synthesis ................................................................................................................. 592 MAGMATIC FLUIDS IN THE CRUST .................................................................................... 595 Mantle degassing in the continental crust: The noble gas imprint ......................................... 595 NOBLE GASES IN MINERAL DEPOSITS AND HYDROTHERMAL FLUIDS ................... 598 Post-entrapment modification of He and Ar isotopes ............................................................ 600 Noble gas mixtures in mineralizing fluids ............................................................................. 601 Description and analysis of multi-component noble gas mixtures in ore fluids .................... 601 Further developments............................................................................................................. 605 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 608 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 608 14 Noble Gases in Lakes and Ground Waters R. Kipfer, W. Aeschbach-Hertig, F. Peeters, M. Stute INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 615 ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES ................................................................................................. 617 NOBLE GAS COMPONENTS IN WATER .............................................................................. 619 Atmospheric noble gases 1: Solubility equilibrium ............................................................... 619 Atmospheric noble gases 2: Excess Air ................................................................................. 624 Radiogenic He (and Ar) ......................................................................................................... 629 Terrigenic He ......................................................................................................................... 629 Radioactive noble gas isotopes .............................................................................................. 630 Man made pseudo-conservative trace gases .......................................................................... 633 Data evaluation and interpretation ......................................................................................... 633 Conceptual models for noble gases in water .......................................................................... 634 Separation of the components ................................................................................................ 641 Interpretation .......................................................................................................................... 647 APPLICATIONS IN LAKES...................................................................................................... 650 Mixing and the distribution of dissolved substances in lakes ................................................ 651 Distribution of noble gases in lakes ....................................................................................... 653 Application of 3H-3He dating in lakes.................................................................................... 654 Quantification of vertical exchange rates and vertical turbulent diffusivities ....................... 658 He flux from the continental crust and oxygen depletion ...................................................... 661 Noble gases from the Earth’s mantle ..................................................................................... 664 Applications in ground water ................................................................................................. 666 Dating of young ground waters.............................................................................................. 667 Dating of old ground waters .................................................................................................. 676 Noble gas recharge temperatures ........................................................................................... 679 Excess air ............................................................................................................................... 684 NOBLE GASES IN ICE ............................................................................................................. 687 Gravitational separation ......................................................................................................... 687 Thermal diffusion .................................................................................................................. 687 Helium isotopes ..................................................................................................................... 689 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 690 15 Noble Gases in Ocean Waters and Sediments Peter Schlosser, Gisela Winckler INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 701 TRACING OCEAN CIRCULATION USING 3HE AND TRITIUM ........................................ 702 Tritium/3He method .............................................................................................................. 702 Exemplary results from tritium/3He studies .......................................................................... 706 MANTLE 3HE ............................................................................................................................. 709 General background .............................................................................................................. 709 Geochemical background...................................................................................................... 709 3 He plumes in the ocean ........................................................................................................ 710 THE FLUX OF 3HE AND 4HE FROM THE SEAFLOOR ......................................................... 711 4 He ........................................................................................................................................ 711 3 He ........................................................................................................................................ 713 EXTRATERRESTRIAL 3HE IN DEEP-SEA SEDIMENTS ...................................................... 715 Delivery of extraterrestrial 3He to the ocean sediments ........................................................ 715 Applications of the IDP-derived 3He method ....................................................................... 717 NOBLE GASES IN DEEP-SEA BRINES .................................................................................. 720 The Red Sea .......................................................................................................................... 720 The Eastern Mediterranean ................................................................................................... 721 AIR/SEA GAS EXCHANGE STUDIED BY DUAL TRACER RELEASE EXPERIMENTS 721 Background ........................................................................................................................... 721 SF6/3He Method .................................................................................................................... 723 Results from oceanic dual gas tracer releases ....................................................................... 723 PERSPECTIVES ......................................................................................................................... 723 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 725 Noble Gases as Dating Tools for Surficial Processes 16 785 Cosmic-Ray-Produced Noble Gases in Terrestrial Rocks: Dating Tools for Surface Processes Samuel Niedermann INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 731 THE FUNDAMENTALS OF SURFACE EXPOSURE DATING ............................................. 732 Production mechanisms of cosmogenic nuclides in terrestrial rocks.................................... 732 Temporal variation of cosmogenic nuclide production ........................................................ 740 Cosmogenic nuclide production at depth and on eroding surfaces ....................................... 748 Derivation of exposure ages and erosion rates...................................................................... 750 Error considerations .............................................................................................................. 754 PRODUCTION RATES OF COSMOGENIC NUCLIDES ....................................................... 755 Experimental determinations of production rates ................................................................. 755 Production rates obtained by model calculations .................................................................. 761 EXPERIMENTAL ISSUES ........................................................................................................ 762 Retentivity of minerals for cosmogenic He and Ne .............................................................. 762 Discrimination of cosmogenic against trapped, radiogenic, and nucleogenic components .. 763 Cosmogenic noble gases as a nuisance ................................................................................. 769 Cosmogenic noble gases versus radionuclides ..................................................................... 770 APPLICATION EXAMPLES ..................................................................................................... 771 Dating of lava flows .............................................................................................................. 771 Glacier movement and ice sheet evolution ........................................................................... 772 Rates of erosion and soil accumulation................................................................................. 773 Rates of tectonic uplift .......................................................................................................... 775 Earthquakes and landslides ................................................................................................... 775 Further applications .............................................................................................................. 776 Future prospects .................................................................................................................... 776 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 777 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 777 17 K-Ar and Ar-Ar Dating Simon Kelley INTRODUCTION — A BIT OF HISTORY .............................................................................. 785 THE K-AR AND AR-AR DATING METHODS ........................................................................ 786 Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 786 Assumptions.......................................................................................................................... 787 CALCULATING K-AR AND AR-AR AGES ............................................................................. 788 The values of constants and estimation of errors .................................................................. 792 ARGON DIFFUSION AND SOLUBILITY ............................................................................... 795 Argon diffusion (and its use to determine thermal histories) ................................................ 795 Argon solubility (and the causes of extraneous argon) ......................................................... 798 APPLICATIONS......................................................................................................................... 806 Thermochronology................................................................................................................ 806 Dating young volcanic eruptions .......................................................................................... 809 High-precision ages on altered basalts .................................................................................. 809 Dating low-temperature processes ........................................................................................ 809 Unique samples ..................................................................................................................... 810 Acknowledgments ....................................................................................................................... 810 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 810 18 (U-Th)/He Dating: Techniques, Calibrations, and Applications Kenneth A. Farley INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 819 Rationale ............................................................................................................................... 819 TECHNICAL ASPECTS ............................................................................................................ 820 He ingrowth .......................................................................................................................... 820 DIFFUSION BEHAVIOR........................................................................................................... 821 Apatite ................................................................................................................................... 822 Hematite ................................................................................................................................ 825 Titanite .................................................................................................................................. 825 Zircon .................................................................................................................................... 826 Garnet.................................................................................................................................... 827 α-emission correction ............................................................................................... 827 Analytical procedures, accuracy, precision and mineral standards....................................... 832 INTERPRETATION OF HE AGES AND EXAMPLES ............................................................ 835 He cooling ages ..................................................................................................................... 835 Some case studies ................................................................................................................. 837 FUTURE PROSPECTS............................................................................................................... 839 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... 840 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 841 APPENDIX: ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES........................................................................... 844