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Buried bone decay

Once uranium is incorporated into buried bone, shell, coral, or speleothems, the isotope uranium-235 decays, initially into the short-lived isotope (thorium-231) and then into long-lived protoactinium-231. Uranium-238, on the other hand, decays first into two successive short-lived isotopes (thorium-234 and protoactinium-234) and only then into a long-lived isotope, uranium-234 (see Fig. 12). The decay of uranium-235 to long-lived protoactinium-231 is used to date events up to 150,000 years in age that of uranium-234 (derived from uranium-238) to thorium-230 is of use for dating events within the time range 1000-500,000 years. [Pg.84]


See other pages where Buried bone decay is mentioned: [Pg.84]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.420]    [Pg.427]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.395]    [Pg.402]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.474]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.539]    [Pg.599]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.358 ]




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