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  2. Uranium–lead dating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uraniumlead_dating

    Uranium–lead dating, abbreviated U–Pb dating, is one of the oldest [1] and most refined of the radiometric dating schemes. It can be used to date rocks that formed and crystallised from about 1 million years to over 4.5 billion years ago with routine precisions in the 0.1–1 percent range.

  3. Radiometric dating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiometric_dating

    Uranium–lead dating is often performed on the mineral zircon (ZrSiO 4), though it can be used on other materials, such as baddeleyite and monazite (see: monazite geochronology). [23] Zircon and baddeleyite incorporate uranium atoms into their crystalline structure as substitutes for zirconium, but strongly reject lead. Zircon has a very high ...

  4. Lead–lead dating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leadlead_dating

    Leadlead dating is a method for dating geological samples, normally based on 'whole-rock' samples of material such as granite.For most dating requirements it has been superseded by uranium–lead dating (U–Pb dating), but in certain specialized situations (such as dating meteorites and the age of the Earth) it is more important than U–Pb dating.

  5. Clair Cameron Patterson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clair_Cameron_Patterson

    Zircon is extremely useful for geological dating: when forming, it collects tiny imperfections of uranium, but never lead. It follows that if lead is present in zircon, it must have come from decay of the uranium present. (The process is known as U-Pb dating.) The team measured the concentrations and isotopic compositions of foreign elements ...

  6. Age of Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Earth

    An age of 4.55 ± 0.07 billion years, very close to today's accepted age, was determined by Clair Cameron Patterson using uranium–lead isotope dating (specifically leadlead dating) on several meteorites including the Canyon Diablo meteorite and published in 1956. [41]

  7. Uranium-238 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium-238

    The most common dating method is uranium-lead dating, which is used to date rocks older than 1 million years old and has provided ages for the oldest rocks on Earth at 4.4 billion years old. [14] The relation between 238 U and 234 U gives an indication of the age of sediments and seawater that are between 100,000 years and 1,200,000 years in ...

  8. Bertram Boltwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertram_Boltwood

    He established that lead (the metal) was the final decay product of uranium, noted that the lead-uranium ratio was greater in older rocks and, acting on a suggestion by Ernest Rutherford, he was the first to measure the age of rocks by the decay of uranium to lead, in 1907. He obtained results of 400 to 2200 million years, the first successful ...

  9. Category:Radiometric dating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Radiometric_dating

    Uranium–lead dating; Uranium–thorium dating; Uranium–uranium dating This page was last edited on 16 February 2022, at 02:25 (UTC). Text is available under ...