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THE RADIOCARBON SAMPLE ARCHIVE OF TRONDHEIM

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2023

Martin Seiler*
Affiliation:
The National Laboratory for Age Determination, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU University Museum, 7033 Trondheim, Norway
Pieter M Grootes
Affiliation:
The National Laboratory for Age Determination, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU University Museum, 7033 Trondheim, Norway Institute for Ecosystem Research, Christian-Albrechts University, 24118 Kiel, Germany
Helene Svarva
Affiliation:
The National Laboratory for Age Determination, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU University Museum, 7033 Trondheim, Norway
Marie-Josée Nadeau
Affiliation:
The National Laboratory for Age Determination, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU University Museum, 7033 Trondheim, Norway
*
*Corresponding author. Email: martin.seiler@ntnu.no
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Abstract

Atmospheric CO2 samples have been collected by the Trondheim Radiocarbon Laboratory since the 1960s. The remaining material from the measurements has been precipitated as CaCO3 and stored in glass containers. We investigated some of the stored samples to assess whether the material could still be used for remeasurements of atmospheric radiocarbon (14C) content, or if it has been contaminated during the years of storage. We attempted different methods to clean the carbonate and release the CO2 for new measurements. The results indicate that the older samples before 1970 show a significant change in 14C content compared to the original measurements, and that our cleaning methods have only little effect. Later samples from the 1970s, which were archived in glass containers with a different lid, show a lower contamination that, however, still leads to an added uncertainty of several pMC and makes these samples unreliable.

Type
Research Article
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Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona

INTRODUCTION

Reidar Nydal, from the Trondheim Radiocarbon Laboratory, became interested in tracing bomb radiocarbon (14C) in the atmosphere (Nydal and Lövseth Reference Nydal and Lövseth1983):

in 1961 when great atmospheric test series were performed at higher northern latitudes, mainly at Novaya Zemlya (…). The very high concentration of 14C in a relatively limited area of the globe at higher northern latitudes gave a better opportunity than earlier to study the exchange of 14C between various parts of the atmosphere and between the atmosphere and other reservoirs in nature. A number of ground stations were established for the purpose between Spitsbergen and Madagascar (…). In most cases more samples were collected at each station than were immediately necessary for measurement, especially during the 1960's. It has been regarded as very important to conserve some extra samples in case there should be need for them. It could also be possible that one would wish to repeat some measurements with higher accuracy in the future.

This resulted in a carbonate archive of atmospheric 14C samples. The different stations, their sampling periods, and measurements are summarized in Figure 1. Out of a total of approximately 2700 samples, about 1600 have been measured and used in a series of publications (Nydal Reference Nydal1963, Reference Nydal1966, Reference Nydal1968; Nydal and Lövseth Reference Nydal and Lövseth1965). The sampling program and data sets were published by (Nydal and Lövseth Reference Nydal and Lövseth1983).

Figure 1 Activity of Nydal’s network sorted by latitude of the sampling location. The horizontal bars indicate the sampling periods when samples were registered. The vertical bars indicate the published measurements. The sampling stations are sorted by their geographical latitude (north to south).

In recent years, the use of 14C as an atmospheric tracer has gained interest in research, particularly regarding the datasets detailing the global distribution of the14C bomb spike over time (Levin and Hesshaimer Reference Levin and Hesshaimer2000; Randerson et al. Reference Randerson, Enting, Schuur, Caldeira and Fung2002; Hua and Barbetti Reference Hua and Barbetti2004; Hua et al. Reference Hua, Barbetti and Rakowski2013, Reference Hua, Turnbull, Santos, Rakowski, Ancapichún, De Pol-Holz, Hammer, Lehman, Levin and Miller2021). This prompted us to revisit the Trondheim archive collection. The samples cover a large latitudinal range at a time when the 14C content of the atmosphere changed very rapidly. In addition, they provide a weekly to monthly resolution throughout the whole year, in contrast to tree rings which record only during the growing season. This makes the collection potentially very valuable to study atmospheric circulation. Not only could the unmeasured samples extend the datasets, remeasurements with modern accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) would also provide higher precision than the original measurements.

Before measuring a large number of samples, we decided to assess whether the archived samples are still in good condition or whether they have been contaminated over the years of storage by adsorbing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) or organic compounds. We selected samples from 1963 for maximum 14C concentrations (≈180 pMC) and test sensitivity. We added stored samples from 1980 (≈130 pMC) that differed less from ambient atmosphere during a shorter storage period for comparison. Archaeological samples (≈50 pMC) were added to repeat the contamination test for samples with a 14C deficit relative to the ambient atmosphere.

Measurements of most samples were not in statistical agreement with the original measurements, indicating serious contamination. Therefore, we tested whether our standard procedures for cleaning carbonate samples could eliminate the contamination. Here, we report the remeasurements of the archived samples and our efforts to remove the contamination.

SAMPLES AND METHODS

Archived Samples

For the Trondheim carbonate archive samples atmospheric CO2 was absorbed in a sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solution at the sampling locations, and the final solution was filled into airtight bottles for shipping to the laboratory in Trondheim (Nydal Reference Nydal1963). The samples, then in the form of sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) and sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) in aqueous solution, were precipitated as calcium carbonate (CaCO3) in the laboratory using calcium chloride (CaCl2) and washed to remove salt. Hydrochloric acid (HCl) was used to release CO2 for measurement while the remaining carbonate material was put into storage (Nydal Reference Nydal1966). In addition to the atmospheric samples, some archaeological samples were also archived. Unfortunately, there is only limited information on the samples and their handling. From the sorting of the samples in the archive boxes, it appears that some samples were precipitated shortly after sampling, while others waited several months or even years before being archived, though no precipitation dates have been documented. Some of the samples from the late 1980s and 1990s were not precipitated and were stored in the NaOH solution. These samples are not part of the present investigation. However, the ordering could also be due to later tidying up. The sample sizes are not documented, but from our assessment, they vary from about 1 g to over 10 g and some of the samples were stored in up to three containers.

The Trondheim carbonate archive contains samples from the 1960s to the early 1990s. Thus, storage time varies greatly. The samples have been stored in glass jars, but the type of lid has changed over the years. The oldest samples were stored in containers with a hard plastic screw cap with a paper liner, which is mechanically fixed without glue (type 1). Starting around 1970, a type with a flexible squeeze-on plastic lid (type 2) came into use, as well as a version with metal screw cap (type 3) which was used to store archaeological samples (Figure 2). When going through the archive boxes, we noticed that some of the type 1 containers were not, or no longer, tightened properly, so that atmospheric CO2 could easily leak into the container. We avoided these when selecting samples for our tests. Some of these samples are stored in multiple containers that we labelled with a suffix letter for later identification. The lids of the type 2 containers are tight on the glass. We did not notice any type 3 containers that were not closed firmly, but there are only few type 3 containers in the archive.

Figure 2 A1) Type 1 container with the inside of the cap (A2). Different sizes were used of this type ranging from the smallest one shown to the same size as the newer models. B1) Type 2 container with its lid (B2). C1) Type 3 container with its metal cap (C2).

Sample Selection

We selected 24 atmospheric samples from the period 1963 to 1980 from a site in Lindesnes, a municipality in Southern Norway (58ºN) as well as 25 archaeological samples with 14C concentration from 25 to 94 pMC, prepared between 1963 and 1984, and stored in all three types of containers to check for a potential influence of storage on the samples’ 14C content (Table 1). Three aliquots from sample L-22-B were taken from the top, middle and lowest part of the sample container to investigate whether we can determine a contamination gradient, e.g., penetrating from the lid down.

Table 1 14C content in pMC of untreated carbonate powder. Reference results: O = original measurement, I = linear interpolation between two neighboring original measurements, S = Schauinsland, V = Vermunt. Symbol † indicates a measurement not used in the calculations.

Some of the samples had been measured by Nydal (Nydal and Lövseth Reference Nydal and Lövseth1983), while the results of the others can be compared to an interpolated value of the two closest Nydal measurements, or to datasets from Vermunt, Austria or Schauinsland in Germany (Levin et al. Reference Levin, Kromer, Schoch-Fischer, Bruns, Münnich, Berdau, Vogel and Münnich1985) (details in Table 1). While the interpolation is not very accurate, this method should work in the period of summer 1963 for which samples it was used, as the Northern Hemisphere zone 1 (NH1) calibration (Hua et al. Reference Hua, Turnbull, Santos, Rakowski, Ancapichún, De Pol-Holz, Hammer, Lehman, Levin and Miller2021) curve shows only minor curvature. We think that the Vermunt and Schauinsland datasets (Levin et al. Reference Levin, Kromer, Schoch-Fischer, Bruns, Münnich, Berdau, Vogel and Münnich1985) are best suited for comparison because they are also based on atmospheric sampling, and are the closest of such sites available. As regional differences are occurring, this comparison only gives a general indication whether the results are accurate, but it might be the most comparable in a sense of local influence (Levin et al. Reference Levin, Kromer, Schmidt and Sartorius2003).

Sample Treatment

We used two methods for CO2 release. The first one was a thermal “combustion” (950ºC) of the carbonate in an elemental analyzer (EA). This will, in addition to the carbonate, also convert organic contaminants into CO2. The CO2 gas was reduced to graphite in our automated reduction system using a H2-Fe-reaction (Seiler et al. Reference Seiler, Grootes, Haarsaker, Lélu, Rzadeczka-Juga, Stene, Svarva, Thun, Værnes and Nadeau2019). In the other method, the samples were prepared in evacuated glass ampoules. H3PO4 was used to release the CO2 from the carbonate only, which was then transferred to our manual Zn–Fe reduction system. Both reduction methods produce equivalent graphite so that the samples can be measured against the same standards and the results can be compared directly (Seiler et al. Reference Seiler, Grootes, Haarsaker, Lélu, Rzadeczka-Juga, Stene, Svarva, Thun, Værnes and Nadeau2019).

All samples were measured twice at the Trondheim 1 MV AMS system following our standard procedures (Nadeau et al. Reference Nadeau, Vaernes, Svarva, Larsen, Gulliksen, Klein and Mous2015; Seiler et al. Reference Seiler, Grootes, Haarsaker, Lélu, Rzadeczka-Juga, Stene, Svarva, Thun, Værnes and Nadeau2019).

As the results of 19 samples prepared both using H3PO4 and EA were statistically identical, the remaining samples were prepared twice with the EA, which is less labor intensive. Early results indicated that some archived bomb spike samples now show a much lower 14C content (5–15 pMC difference). Thus, an important question was whether this contamination could be reliably removed.

We tested two different leaching methods to remove contamination from 12 atmospheric and 7 archaeological samples. Firstly, we subjected the samples to 0.5 mL H2O2 (30%), which should remove potential organic contaminants and leach the surface of the carbonate, removing potentially adsorbed CO2. The samples were kept in H2O2 for at least 2 hr before further treatment. The other method was a surface leaching with ca. 0.3 mL diluted HCl (1%) wherein about 10% of the most exposed material was removed. The H2O2 and HCl solutions were then syphoned-off and the carbonate was kept wet to reduce adsorption of atmospheric CO2 (Schleicher et al. Reference Schleicher, Grootes, Nadeau and Schoon1998). Approximately 15 mg of carbonate material was weighed before starting the treatments. The samples were not weighed afterwards as they were not completely dried before the release of CO2, but the amount of CO2 is an indicator of how much material was lost in the cleaning process. CO2 was released from the leached material using both the H3PO4 and EA methods. We compared the results without cleaning with those obtained after leaching with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) or hydrochloric acid (HCl). The cleaning with H2O2 and HCl was done to samples already loaded in the EA boats (aluminum or silver respectively) or the glass ampoules to avoid losses in sample transfer.

The cleaning methods were checked using IAEA C2 material as well as a marble sample from a quarry on Thassos, Greece, as process blank (Table 2). Neither of these materials can perfectly represent the laboratory-produced carbonate powder, nonetheless they can help to determine contamination caused by the treatment methods selected and demonstrate the reproducibility. The marble has not been milled, and the fragments are larger than the powder of the archived carbonates. This will influence the effectiveness of the leaching methods. The IAEA C2 travertine material has been milled and resembles the carbonate powder more closely. However, it contains some organic compounds that might affect the chemical treatment and the measurement result. Both marble and IAEA C2 underwent the same treatments as the archived carbonate samples with four repetitions each.

Table 2 14C content in pMC of process blanks (Thassos marble) and secondary standards (IAEA C2) according to CO2 extraction and cleaning methods. Symbol † indicates a measurement not used in the calculations.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

The 14C concentrations of the archived samples, measured in duplicate, are listed in Table 1. The reliability of these measurements is supported by their duplication. The average difference in 14C concentration of CO2 obtained by EA combustion and with H3PO4 or by two EA combustions does not differ statistically from zero. The standard deviation of these differences, calculated from their scatter, agrees statistically with the measurement uncertainty calculated from the individual differences, provided two values (TRa-16393 (L-22-B), TRa-16395 (L-24), H3PO4) are ignored. These two measurements show a significantly lower 14C content than the other measurements of the same samples (Tables 1 and 3). For TRa-16393 the difference from the measurement with EA combustion is –14.6 pMC (41σ) and for sample TRa-16395 it is –4.4 pMC (16σ). The results of these measurements do not match with any of the other samples treated at the same time so that we can exclude that the sample material was mixed up. We also exclude the possibility that the tools were not properly cleaned between handling samples because the difference is quite large and such a contamination would have been seen. While it is unclear what happened, we speculate that the most likely explanation is that some additional material has fallen into the sample glass between adding the sample and sealing the glass. However, such large variations have never been seen when measuring secondary standards. Both results were excluded from further analysis.

Table 3 14C content of carbonate samples prepared with different to CO2 extraction and cleaning methods. The 14C contents without cleaning are from Table 1. Symbol † indicates a measurement not used in the calculations. The uncertainty in the listed averages is based on the scatter of the listed differences and the number of samples.

We tried to remove contamination by gentle leaching with H2O2 and HCl solutions followed by extraction of CO2 in our Elemental Analyzer (EA) and with H3PO4, which resulted in four data sets. The Thassos marble blank and IAEA-C2 were used to check contamination introduced in this procedure. While the leaching with H2O2 and HCl seems to have little effect on the blank value for H3PO4 extraction, it causes an increase in 14C for the EA combusted samples (Table 2). The 14C concentrations measured for untreated material by EA combustion are about 0.15 pMC higher than for CO2 released by H3PO4, possibly due to a low organic contamination. One measurement of the Thassos marble blank with H2O2 cleaning and EA combustion yielded a value of 5.40 ± 0.03 pMC, approximately 10 times higher than the others. This measurement was considered an outlier and has not been included in the mean blank value for its method. A similar contamination was seen on a measurement of the IAEA-C2 samples at 48.52 ± 0.12 pMC and for some of the unknowns (TRa-16399, TRa-16410-12, Table 3). The contamination offsets are different for each of the samples, but they are always directed towards the atmospheric 14CO2 ratio at the time of preparation (≈101 pMC). This leads to the conclusion that a modern contamination occurred during the leaching-EA treatment. It has been reported that carbonates are prone to uptake of atmospheric carbon after leaching with H2O2 and also that keeping the samples wet afterwards prevents this effect (Schleicher et al. Reference Schleicher, Grootes, Nadeau and Schoon1998). While we attempted to keep the samples wet while exposed to atmosphere, this could not be guaranteed when transferring the samples into the EA. The degree of drying would be different for each sample, explaining the different offsets that we observed. Meanwhile, keeping the samples wet and sealed from the atmosphere in the H3PO4-CO2 extraction is not an issue. Accordingly, none of those results show an offset. While the specific measurements mentioned above were affected strongly by this issue, it cannot be excluded that other samples have been affected on a smaller scale. The results of the HCl-cleaned samples with EA treatment, show a larger scatter than the other methods, both for the IAEA-C2 and the marble samples (Table 2). In case of the C2 sample, the standard deviation is 1.0 pMC while it is only 0.16–0.41 pMC for the other methods. This could indicate that a similar adsorption effect also happened to some of these samples. The measurements with CO2 released by H3PO4, do not show such variations which is consistent with them being kept in vacuum after leaching.

The mean results of the Thassos marble samples (Table 2) were used for the process blank correction for archive samples subjected to the corresponding leaching methods.

For the testing of 49 archived samples, a total of 178 individual targets were measured in 16 different wheels together with a total of 160 reference samples (OXII) (Mann Reference Mann1983) for normalization. The measurement uncertainty was verified with a χ2 test of the OXII results (Turnbull et al. Reference Turnbull, Zondervan, Kaiser, Norris, Dahl, Baisden and Lehman2015). The mean uncertainty for the measurements, based on counting statistics, is 0.17 pMC and only a contribution of 0.07 pMC is needed to bring the observed scatter into statistical χ2 agreement.

In addition to the measurement uncertainty and the method uncertainty determined by the IAEA-C2 measurements (0.13 pMC), an uncertainty of 0.4 pMC needs to be added to the individual measurements for statistical agreement in a χ2 test, which would be attributed to inhomogeneity of the archived material itself. While a precision of 0.4 pMC would still be an improvement for the measurements of the archaeological samples, the required precision for relevant atmospheric measurements is 0.3% (Crotwell et al. Reference Crotwell, Lee and Steinbacher2019) which was not achieved with the measurement of the archived carbonates. The original measurements by gas proportional counting on large samples of fresh material had uncertainties of 0.5–1.2 pMC so that the variations we observed would not have been seen or present.

To assess sample homogeneity, L-22-B was sampled three times and each sub-sample was measured twice. The top layer was measured at 171.57 ± 0.19 and 170.95 ± 0.30 pMC, the middle layer at 171.74 ± 0.23 and 170.79 ± 0.25 pMC, and the lower layer at 173.49 ± 0.18 and 172.06 ± 0.27 pMC. While the top and middle aliquots statistically have the same values, the bottom one has a slightly higher 14C content. This difference indicates that the contamination that we observed may have been introduced from the top. All three layers are significantly below the originally measured value of sample L-22 (180.4 ± 1.0 pMC) indicating that the contamination has considerable effect on all the material in the container.

To assess whether remeasurements of the archived atmospheric CO2 samples make sense, we have to confirm that the measurement results will accurately represent the atmosphere at the time of sampling. The atmospheric samples of 1963 show 14C concentration values that are significantly lower (6.0–16.8 pMC) than the original measurements by Nydal (Table 1, Figure 3B). Results for later atmospheric samples from 1967 to 1980 have to be compared to the datasets of Vermunt or Schauinsland as there are no original Nydal measurements (Table 1; Figure 3A). The difference is large for the samples in type 1 containers (L-187, 188, 226, 236, 238, 259) that are measured lower by 1.3–4.9 pMC. An exception is the result for L-189 from 1967-09-04 that is 2.90 ± 0.62 pMC (4.7σ) higher than its Vermunt counterpart. The explanation may be that this Vermunt 14C value is 4.3 pMC lower than that of the preceding samples 1967-08-07 and 1967-08-21 while our measured 14C value is quite similar to what we measured for the two preceding samples. This shift towards atmospheric values is corroborated by the 14C-depleted archaeological samples where samples in type 1 containers are all measured above the original values (1.1–2.5 pMC).

Figure 3 Deviation of measurement results from original value of 14C concentration (pMC) for uncleaned samples in different container types. (A) Archaeological samples and atmospheric samples from 1967 and later. (B) Atmospheric samples from 1963.

Seven atmospheric samples stored in type 2 containers (L-232, 252, 284, 285, 358-360) are in general statistical agreement with the corresponding reference datasets from Vermunt and Schauinsland (Levin and Kromer Reference Levin and Kromer2004). Two of the samples (L-286 and L-361 from December 1974 and November 1980, respectively) are more than 3σ higher in 14C concentration than their reference values, which would not be expected from a contamination by later atmospheric CO2. Since there are no original measurements for these samples, the comparison is with samples from a different location with, possibly, different local effects. For the Schauinsland record, 14C concentrations below clean-air at the Jungfraujoch by 2–6‰ in summer and 10–15‰ in winter have been reported (Levin and Kromer Reference Levin and Kromer2004). This could explain that the archive measurements are higher in 14C than the Schauinsland and Vermunt records if the sampling location at Lindesnes reflects clean air during the sampling period. This is supported by measurements from Mace Head on the West coast of Ireland that show no significant difference in 14C concentration with the Jungfraujoch measurements (Levin and Kromer Reference Levin and Kromer2004) and by the location of Lindesnes that is also on the West coast, although facing the North Sea instead of the Atlantic Ocean. However, without an independent method of verification, we cannot validate this assumption, especially for the sampling period in question. Therefore, we cannot determine whether these samples in type 2 containers are uncontaminated. We therefore remeasured several archaeological samples archived in type 2 containers.

Eight out of 18 archaeological samples in type 2 containers differ by more than 2σ (Table 1). This non-statistical behavior indicates individual contamination. Six remeasured samples show higher 14C concentrations, as expected for atmospheric contamination, with an average offset of 2.03 ± 0.41 pMC. Two samples with 97.40 ± 0.80 and 95.30 ± 0.70 pMC were remeasured lower by 3.15 ± 0.81 and 2.25 ± 0.71 pMC, respectively. These off-sets are large compared with the ≈0.8 pMC uncertainty of the original measurement and the 0.4 pMC scatter discussed above. The results indicate that also the type 2 containers are unreliable to prevent atmospheric contamination during storage. This must also apply to the atmospheric samples from the Trondheim archive so that remeasurements may not provide 14C concentrations representative for the atmosphere at the time of sampling.

Only the type 3 containers seem to perform better with no indication of atmospheric contamination, but these were unfortunately not used for atmospheric samples.

We see that the difference between original and remeasurement is varying more than the uncertainties predict, even after considering additional uncertainty for inhomogeneity of the samples as described above. This means that the amount of contamination is varying individually for each sample and therefore cannot be corrected for by calculation. A crucial question is thus whether the contamination can reliably be removed. We tested “cleaning” the archived samples using established leaching protocols for carbonate samples.

Table 3 lists the 14C concentrations of the 12 atmospheric and 7 archaeological archive samples, cleaned with H2O2 or HCl, and their CO2 prepared with EA or H3PO4. We compared these with their mean 14C values without cleaning from Table 1 and calculated the average change for each of the four methods. A removal of a modern contamination would affect the bomb-14C-enriched atmospheric and the 14C-decay-depleted archaeological samples in an antithetic way so that we split the evaluation for these groups. Outliers of the H2O2-EA treatment mentioned above are not used in the averages and are marked with † in the tables.

The strongest effect of the cleaning can be seen in the leaching methods combined with H3PO4 extraction of CO2 for the atmospheric samples. The increase of 0.45 ± 0.16 and 0.48 ± 0.14 pMC in 14C concentration for H2O2 and HCl leaching, respectively, documents a statistically significant, average removal of recent contamination. Significant also is that for H2O2, as 9 of 12 cleaned samples showed higher 14C values, 5 of which >2σ, and only 3 lower, but <2σ. HCl leaching gave similar improvements with 5 14C increases >2σ and 5 <2σ, and only 2 decreases <2σ (Table 3). The increase of the measured 14C content indicates that part of the contamination is removed, and the results are more representative than for the uncleaned samples. The observed change is, unfortunately, still quite small, with a maximum of 1.66 pMC, compared to the differences from the original values of up to 16.8 pMC. Furthermore, these cleaning methods seem to have no effect on the archaeological samples so that we cannot conclude that the cleaning produces reliable results.

The leaching methods combined with the EA combustions do not show, on average, a statistically significant change in 14C concentration for the atmospheric samples. The scatter in 14C changes is, however, large with three increases and three decreases >2σ for H2O2 and four increases with one decrease >2σ for HCl. Considering the 14C increase for archaeological samples after H2O2 leaching, we conclude that these samples were also subject to adsorption of atmospheric CO2 when drying after the leaching, although on a smaller level then the ones mentioned earlier. This seems to be less of an issue for the HCl leaching as the archaeological samples are measured on average 0.27 pMC lower after the leaching, which again corresponds to a limited removal of modern contamination. This corresponds to our expectations of modern contamination being removed, while adsorption of modern CO2 during EA-loading is small for these samples. However, we cannot explain why this would not have been observed for the HCl leaching in combination with H3PO4, other than that this is caused by the small number of samples measured.

The 14C concentrations for CO2 prepared with leaching and H3PO4, where we did not have adsorption of atmospheric CO2 during the treatment (Tables 2 and 3), show that the contamination evident in Table 1 was not completely removed by our H2O2 and HCl leaching. Instead, we only removed about 10%. Leaching, which can successfully be applied to other sample types e.g., foraminifera (Schleicher et al. Reference Schleicher, Grootes, Nadeau and Schoon1998), apparently is not effective in cleaning the finely powdered CaCO3 precipitate of the archived samples, probably because the surface to volume ratio is so high that contamination could affect every part of the sample.

CONCLUSION

Archived carbonate samples of the Trondheim latitudinal network of atmospheric 14C sampling stations, started in 1962, show serious contamination, probably with atmospheric CO2, which could not be removed by the chemical leaching methods applied in this study. Contamination is especially serious for the early samples from the 1960s that were stored in glass containers with a hard-plastic screw cap (type 1). Samples after 1971, largely stored in containers with a flexible squeeze-on plastic lid (type 2), show a variable, lower contamination.

The increased uncertainty in 14C concentration, due to a variable atmospheric contamination, negates benefits in precision that AMS could offer for these samples of atmospheric CO2. Since the precise degree of contamination for an individual sample cannot be assessed, the archived samples are, unfortunately, no longer reliable to be of use in atmospheric datasets.

References

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Figure 0

Figure 1 Activity of Nydal’s network sorted by latitude of the sampling location. The horizontal bars indicate the sampling periods when samples were registered. The vertical bars indicate the published measurements. The sampling stations are sorted by their geographical latitude (north to south).

Figure 1

Figure 2 A1) Type 1 container with the inside of the cap (A2). Different sizes were used of this type ranging from the smallest one shown to the same size as the newer models. B1) Type 2 container with its lid (B2). C1) Type 3 container with its metal cap (C2).

Figure 2

Table 1 14C content in pMC of untreated carbonate powder. Reference results: O = original measurement, I = linear interpolation between two neighboring original measurements, S = Schauinsland, V = Vermunt. Symbol † indicates a measurement not used in the calculations.

Figure 3

Table 2 14C content in pMC of process blanks (Thassos marble) and secondary standards (IAEA C2) according to CO2 extraction and cleaning methods. Symbol † indicates a measurement not used in the calculations.

Figure 4

Table 3 14C content of carbonate samples prepared with different to CO2 extraction and cleaning methods. The 14C contents without cleaning are from Table 1. Symbol † indicates a measurement not used in the calculations. The uncertainty in the listed averages is based on the scatter of the listed differences and the number of samples.

Figure 5

Figure 3 Deviation of measurement results from original value of 14C concentration (pMC) for uncleaned samples in different container types. (A) Archaeological samples and atmospheric samples from 1967 and later. (B) Atmospheric samples from 1963.