Affiliation:
1. Instituto de Geociencias Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Campus UNAM‐Juriquilla Blvd. Juriquilla 3001, C.P. Querétaro 76230 México
2. Departamento de Geología Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada (CICESE), Carretera Ensenada‐Tijuana No. 3918 Zona Playitas, C.P. 22860 Ensenada Baja California México
Abstract
In situ 87Sr/86Sr microanalysis in bioapatite using laser ablation (LA‐)MC‐ICP‐MS is an essential tool for provenance studies, as enamel tissue build‐up records the regional Sr isotopic composition of ingested food and water sources. Several factors hamper the acquisition of reliable and precise 87Sr/86Sr data: isobaric interferences, elemental and isotopic fractionation of Rb and Sr, and the lack of certified reference materials. Here we thoroughly characterise several teeth from Carcharinus leucas (Bull shark) for the spatial distribution of Sr and Rb mass fraction by LA‐ICP‐Q‐MS, and their 87Sr/86Sr ratio by solution MC‐ICP‐MS, MC‐TIMS and LA‐MC‐ICP‐MS, and which were used subsequently as a reference material during laser ablation measurement of Sr isotope ratios in bioapatite. We establish a protocol to estimate the 85Rb/87Rb mass bias from the analysis of shark teeth that demonstrates that the common assumption of equal Sr and Rb instrument induced fractionation can lead to a systematic bias in 87Sr/86Sr isotope ratios. Using the shark teeth as an "external" reference material to measure βRb yielded 87Sr/86Sr compositions in unknown samples that are within approximately ‐42 ppm to +66 ppm of expected values, instead of approximately ‐50 ppm to +190 ppm if assuming βRb = βSr. Finally, this methodology was tested on fossil gomphotherid (Rhynchotherium sp.) enamel, allowing us to make preliminary inferences about its palaeobiogeography.
Funder
Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología
Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México