Wolfgang
Müller
*a and
Robert
Anczkiewicz
b
aDepartment of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, UK. E-mail: wolfgang.muller@rhul.ac.uk
bInstitute of Geological Sciences, Polish Academy of Sciences, Krakow, Poland
First published on 28th October 2015
Apatite is a key mineral whose Sr-isotope record has a wide range of applications including palaeofluid flow studies from inorganic apatite, and past faunal/human mobility or palaeoecology using bioapatite. The incremental growth of mammalian enamel bioapatite potentially allows extraction of Sr isotopic compositions at sub-annual time-resolution using laser-ablation plasma mass spectrometry (LA-MC-ICPMS). However, existing apatite LA-MC-ICPMS Sr-isotope data have yielded mixed results. Here we assess the achievable accuracy/precision of (bio)apatite LA-MC-ICPMS Sr-isotope analysis and evaluate sources of inaccuracy. Using robust plasma conditions (ThO+/Th+ < 0.2%), we obtain long-term (4 year) accurate and precise Sr-isotope data for modern shark teeth for both radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr (0.709171 ± 0.000053, 2 SD), and naturally invariant 84Sr/86Sr (0.056500 ± 0.000040, 2 SD). Based on our accurate 84Sr/86Sr-results also for low-Sr enamel, we deduce that interferences are successfully corrected (Kr) or negligible (Ca-argide/dimer), leaving 87Rb and 40Ca31P16O isobaric interferences as key potential sources for 87Sr/86Sr inaccuracy. Our (pseudo)high-resolution mass scans using a virtually Rb–Sr-free, concentrated Ca–P-solution simulating apatite LA analysis show no evidence for 40Ca31P16O at the required intensities to explain previously observed 87Sr/86Sr offsets. Rather, using the same Ca–P solution with varying Rb + Sr isotope standard additions, we accurately constrain the mass bias-corrected 85Rb/87Rb-ratio, and using apatite glasses assess the extent of Rb/Sr elemental fractionation during laser-ablation. Finally, we present concordant LA-MC-ICPMS and microsampled-TIMS 87Sr/86Sr results for low-Sr tooth enamel with highly variable inter & intra-87Sr/86Sr ratios and comparatively high Rb/Sr-ratios. This archaeological example also illustrates well the problem of defining equivalent sample volumes that allow unequivocal comparison between LA and TIMS data.
In situ analysis at high-spatial resolution is essential in order to extract the time-series information at high resolution stored in continuously growing samples like otoliths, dental enamel or speleothems and/or to retrieve isotopic information with textural control (e.g. in zoned plagioclase). Besides the much improved spatial resolution compared to conventional microsampling,1,2in situ analysis is also faster than thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS) or solution multi-collector inductively-coupled-plasma mass spectrometry (MC-ICPMS), but at the expense of not being able to chemically remove isobaric interferences off-line via ion-exchange chemistry.
The potential of in situ Sr isotope analysis using laser-ablation-MC-ICPMS (LA-MC-ICPMS) with precision comparable to TIMS was realized early in the development of MC-ICPMS.3 Consequently, LA-MC-ICPMS Sr-isotope analyses applied to carbonates or feldspars have gradually become standard methodological repertoire,4–7 despite the occasionally reported accuracy problems.8,9 On the other hand, LA-MC-ICPMS Sr isotope investigations of inorganically or biologically formed Ca-phosphates (apatite) have often resulted in inaccurate data, attributed to the existence of an interference on m/z = 87 from 40Ca31P16O,10–12 even though some successful applications also have been reported, albeit with somewhat reduced precision/accuracy.13,14 Apatite is not only a key inorganic mineral recording, for example, palaeo-fluid flow processes,15 but it is especially also the key biomineral in vertebrate skeletons. The Sr-isotopic composition particularly of tooth enamel has arguably become the key methodology in palaeoecology and archaeology to trace past faunal or human mobility.16,17 Owing to the incremental two-stage mineralization18,19 of tooth enamel over several years, for example in humans of ∼15 years, spatially-resolved Sr-isotopic data of enamel have the potential to reveal sub-seasonal mobility patterns, especially if combined with counted chronologies from enamel histology20 (Fig. 1).
Here we report the results of systematic investigations aimed at evaluating the various sources of inaccuracy of LA-MC-ICPMS 87Sr/86Sr ratio analysis of (bio)apatite, focusing on radiogenic variability rather than natural stable Sr-isotope variations. Besides reporting accurate values of the naturally invariant 84Sr/86Sr ratio (if normalized to constant 88Sr/86Sr (ref. 21)), we focus on the presence of 40Ca31P16O signals via detailed mass scans at various mass resolutions, because at m/z = 87, molecular interferences such as 40Ca31P16O are resolvable from either 87Sr or 87Rb at medium or high mass resolution. We also assess the crucial 87Rb correction, the accuracy of which for (bio)apatite is paramount in view of the often elevated 85Rb/86Sr ratios (∼5 × 10−2 to 10−4). Finally, we show not only long-term (∼4 year) external standard reproducibilities of Sr-isotope ratios by LA-MC-ICPMS, but importantly also results of comparative microsampling-TIMS vs. LA-MC-ICPMS analyses of the same archaeological human teeth to evaluate accuracy of the latter.
MC-ICPMS: Neptune | |
---|---|
RF power | Soln.: 1250–1350 W; LA: 1150–1250 W |
Sampler, skimmer cones | Normal, not Xcone |
Carrier, sweep gas flow (Ar); diatomic gas flow (N2) | Aridus II: PFA nebulizer, 50 μl min−1 uptake, ∼0.89 l min−1 carrier gas, ∼3.5 l min−1 sweep gas, ∼10 ml min−1 N2 (all optimized daily) |
LA: ∼520 ml min−1 (optimized daily), ∼6.5 ml min−1 N2 (optimized daily) | |
Coolant gas flow | 15 l min−1 |
Auxilliary gas flow | 0.9 l min−1 |
ThO+/Th+ (248/232) | Solution: <0.1% (typically 0.06%); LA: <0.2% |
232Th/238U | Solution & LA: >0.93 |
Er2+/Er+; Yb2+/Yb+ | 0.7; 0.4% |
Integration time | 8 or 4 × 1.04 s |
Laser-ablation system RESOlution M-50 | |
---|---|
Energy density (fluence) on target | 8 J cm−2 |
LA cell | Laurin two-volume M-50 cell |
He gas flow | 900 ml min−1 |
Laser repetition rate | 5–30 Hz |
Laser spot size | 60–110 μm |
Ablation mode | Path ablation, X–Y stage speed 0.3–0.5 mm min−1 |
Transport tubing | Nylon |
Signal smoothing | Squid included |
Faraday cup | L3 | L2 | L1 | C | H1 | H2 | H3 | H4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Element/isotope (m/z) | 82 | 83.5 | 84 | 85 | 86 | 86.5 | 87 | 88 |
Sr | 84 (∼0.56%) | 86 (∼9.9%) | 87 (∼7.0%) | 88 (∼82.6%) | ||||
Rb | 85 (72.2%) | 87 (27.8%) | ||||||
Kr | 82 (11.6%) | 84 (57.0%) | 86 (17.3%) | |||||
xx Ca40Ar, xxCa40Ca, (40Ca: 96.941%, 40Ar: 99.60%) | 42CaAr, 42CaCa (0.647%) | 44CaAr, 44CaCa (2.086%) | 46CaAr, 46CaCa (0.004%) | 48CaAr, 48CaCa (0.187%) | ||||
REE2+ | 164Dy (28.18%), 164Er (1.61%) | 167Er (22.93%) | 168Er (26.78%), 168Yb (0.13%) | 170Er (14.93%), 170Yb (3.04%) | 172Yb (21.83%) | 173Yb (16.13%) | 174Yb (31.83%), 174Hf (0.16%) | 176Yb (12.76%), 176Hf (5.26%), 176Lu (2.59%) |
CaPO | 40Ca31P16O (16O: 99.76%) | 40Ca31P17O (17O: 0.038%) |
Additional contextual LA-ICPMS trace element concentration data were obtained at Royal Holloway University of London (RHUL) using the RESOlution M-50 prototype LA system featuring a Laurin two-volume LA cell coupled to an Agilent 7500ce quadrupole-ICPMS.22
Emphasis of both solution and LA-MC-ICPMS analyses was on ‘robust’ plasma conditions characterized by very low ThO+/Th+-ratios (<0.2%; unless deliberately detuned, see below) and 232Th/238U-ratios > 0.93 (solutions with equal Th–U concentrations or SRM612), which were achieved by attention to carrier gas flow, RF power and aided by using a dry plasma with N2-addition24,25 (Table 1). We note that ThO+ represents the maximum metal oxide-production owing to its highest metal–oxygen bond strength,26–30 and that other common oxide-production monitoring ratios (e.g. UO+/U+ (ref. 31) and CeO+/Ce+) are ∼2.5–3.5× lower. With the exception of the alkali-metals, this is valid not only for neutrals but also for metal-cations because the corresponding metal–O or metal-cation–O bond strengths differ by no more than ±10–20%.26,27,30 Er2+ and Yb2+ production rates were 0.7 and 0.4%, respectively. Overall, conditions were kept as similar as possible between the two modi so as to allow comparability of the corresponding results. X-geometry skimmer cones were not used due potentially elevated oxide production that is offset only with minimal (<10%) sensitivity gain.32
Tuning for maximum sensitivity and signal stability as well as best peak shape while maintaining above mentioned robust plasma characteristics was performed in path ablation mode using SRM616 glass (41.7 ppm Sr34), which yielded 0.8–1.8 mV ppm−1 88Sr using a 60 μm spot, 5 Hz repetition rate and 1 mm min−1 stage speed, depending on cones and prior usage. SRM616 with its low Rb/Sr ratio (0.0025) was chosen so as to avoid unnecessary Rb build-up on cones, crucial in view of maintaining accurate on-peak baselines. Using the higher concentrated NIST-glasses (SRM612, 610) can lead to increasing Rb-signals due to ‘cone-erosion’; the latter, however, were used briefly to assess 232Th/238U and ThO+/Th+-ratios. Matrix-matched Ca–P–(Si) STDP glasses35 were used to evaluate elemental Rb/Sr fractionation.
The main in-house Sr-isotope standard used is the isotopically-homogenous (Sr) enameloid of modern shark teeth captured off-shore W-Australia and S-Africa, respectively, with [Sr] of ∼2500 μg g−1. These record the modern open-marine 87Sr/86Sr ratio of 0.709175;36 whale teeth were evaluated but not utilized further because of their too thin enamel.
Fig. 2 Long-term Sr-isotope ratios of two modern shark in-house reference samples analyzed by LA-MC-ICPMS interchangeably over four years (Aug. 2010–Sep. 2014; n = 84 of 88). Both 87Sr/86Sr and 84Sr/86Sr ratios yield good long-term reproducibility and resultant averages demonstrate remarkable accuracy as they agree well with modern marine 87Sr/86Sr (0.709175 ± 0.000019) and natural 84Sr/86Sr ratios (0.056492 ± 0.0000016)28,31 (open symbols on right hand side). |
Fig. 4 Mass scan experiments using a ±Rb–Sr-free, concentrated Ca–P solution at (pseudo)medium (a–c) and (pseudo)high mass-resolution (d–g) to evaluate the presence of molecular interference 40Ca31P16O at m/z = 87. In view of the small residual signals, Faraday (a) or SEM collectors (b–g) were used. ‘Robust’ plasma conditions (ThO/Th = 0.06%, a–e) vs. deliberately detuned, high oxide plasma conditions (ThO/Th = 9.6%, f, g) reveal neither differences in peak-shape, nor, crucially, any minor peaks offset towards slightly higher mass that would indicate molecular interferences. This suggests that 40Ca31P16O does not occur at the required intensities to explain offsets in LA-MC-ICPMS 87Sr/86Sr ratios of apatite11,12 (see text; steps: 800, integration time/step: SEM 0.52 s, FAR 1.04 s). |
Our LA-MC-ICPMS data of marine bioapatite are remarkably accurate not only for the 87Sr/86Sr but especially also the 84Sr/86Sr ratio. The latter is a particularly sensitive indicator for the presence of spectral interferences because 84Sr is the least abundant Sr isotope (0.56% abundance), yet interfered not only by the most abundant Kr isotope (84Kr = 57.0%) but potentially also the largest Ca-dimer (44Ca40Ca) and Ca-argide (44Ca40Ar; 44Ca = 2.086%). In addition, the denominator-isotope 86Sr is interfered by the second most abundant Kr-isotope (86Kr = 17.3% and a small Ca-argide/dimer interference, 46Ca = 0.004%). The fact that we routinely obtain accurate 84Sr/86Sr data suggests that not only the extended on-peak baselines adequately correct for invariably present 84,86Kr (84Kr ∼ 1–1.5% of 84Sr) but also that no resolvable molecular Ca-dimer/argides are present. The latter is further confirmed because m/z = 82 (chiefly 42Ca40Ar, 42Ca40Ca) typically shows background-corrected intensities not resolvable from 0 μV (see below for equally accurate 84Sr/86Sr ratios of lower-[Sr] human enamel). Other studies, notably with different MC-ICPMS instrumentation, report the presence of significant Ca–Ca/Ar signals4,7,8 affecting especially the 84Sr/86Sr ratio, whereas others report no such effects.40,41 We surmise that both different plasma sources of MC-ICPMS instruments and especially attention to plasma tuning contribute to this difference, and deduce from our results that the Kr, Ca-dimers/argides (and REE2+) spectral interferences have successfully been corrected herein.
Using the central Faraday detector, comparative mass scans at low mass resolution of both the Ca–P solution and clean Sr-solutions are shown in Fig. 3. Based on both residual 85Rb and 88Sr peaks (1.5, 2.0 mV), the contribution of both 87Rb and 87Sr to m/z = 87 can be evaluated, which leaves <0.04 mV non-87(Rb + Sr) at m/z = 87. This strongly contrasts with the suggestion that 0.3–1% of m/z = 87 are Ca–P–O-related,11 implying that for LA apatite analysis yielding 2 V 88Sr (170 mV 87Sr), Ca–P–O should be ∼0.5–1.7 mV (>10–45× of what is seen here). Apart from observing identical (residual) m/z = 87 peaks for both the Ca–P and the clean Sr solutions (Fig. 3c–f) and quantifying the Rb + Sr contributions, low mass resolution is not sufficient to assess the potential presence of 40Ca31P16O.
At medium and high mass resolving power (Fig. 4) the residual m/z = 87 signals using the Ca–P solution are very small (<0.2 mV) and thus not only FAR but also SEM mass scans are shown. Neither the Faraday nor SEM scans show any evidence for a secondary (molecular) peak offset towards higher mass, even though the MC-ICPMS was also deliberately detuned towards high oxide production (ThO+/Th+ ∼ 9.6% vs. typically 0.06%; Fig. 4(f and g)vs.(a–e)). Yet even at these unusual plasma conditions, the mass scans are not noticeably different. We note that the SEM scans are not as symmetric as the equivalent FAR scans but crucially show no difference despite >150× varying oxide-levels. Slight peak asymmetry using the SEM is not untypical in our experience also with other elements, but most importantly m/z = 87 at (pseudo)high-mass resolution shows a flat peak plateau. We therefore deduce that 40Ca31P16O does not occur at the intensities high enough to explain the 87Sr/86Sr offsets observed in some cases of LA-MC-ICPMS analysis of apatite.11,12 Both Ca and P (and indeed Ca+ and P+ cations) are characterized by significantly lower oxygen affinity compared to Th (or Th+),26–28,30 and their oxide production can be approximated from the logarithmic relationship between metal-oxide/metal-ion ratio to M–O bond strength.29 Plotting our measured logTh+, U+ and Ce+ oxide production relative to the respective bond strengths (bond dissociation energies) facilitates an approximate extrapolation to both Ca+ and P+, whose oxide productions become ∼0.0007 and ∼0.004%, respectively. It is unclear how likely a more complex triatomic CaPO molecule would form, but it may well form even less likely than Ca–O, in which case the ∼0.0007% value would represent an upper limit, supporting our observation of essentially negligible 40Ca31P16O at m/z = 87.
Using our essentially Rb–Sr-free concentrated Ca–P solution as apatite matrix (see above), we prepared aliquots with varying 85Rb/86Sr ratios from 9.1 × 10−5 to 1.3 × 10−1 by adding varying amounts of SRM984 (Rb) and SRM987 (Sr) while maintaining few tens of ppb [Sr] (Table S2 (ESI†)). Plotting the Sr-mass-bias-corrected but 87Rb-uncorrected 87(Sr + Rb)/86Sr-ratio vs. the measured 85Rb/86Sr ratio yields the effective 87Rb/85Rb-ratio as slope and the SRM987 87Sr/86Sr-ratio as y-intercept of the regression line. The resultant regression line is highly linear across the considerable range of Rb/Sr-ratios, yielding a slope, converted into 85Rb/87Rb, of 2.5348 ± 0.0015 (95% c.l., MSWD = 2.1, n = 11 (MSWD – mean square weighted deviation)) and a y-intercept (0.710259 ± 0.000010), the latter in line with Rb-free SRM987 values (Fig. 5). These values remain indistinguishable within uncertainties if the highest two 85Rb/86Sr ratios are excluded (85Rb/87Rb = 2.5265 ± 0.0172 (95% c.l., MSWD = 2.0, n = 9)). As expected from ICP mass bias, the 2.5348 value is lower than the accepted natural 85Rb/87Rb-ratio (2.59265;45 −2.24%) and interpreted to represent the 85Rb/87Rb ratio necessary for an accurate Rb-mass-bias correction in the presence of large Ca–P ion beams such as during LA-MC-ICPMS analysis of apatite.
We note that there are considerable differences on how to correct for the inevitable isobaric 87Rb amongst the various Sr-isotope LA-MC-ICPMS studies. Some suggest strongly mass bias affected 85Rb/87Rb values of ∼2.468,6,46 others utilize natural-Rb (85Rb/87Rb = 2.59265) and assume Sr-mass bias to be applicable,31,41 others use 85Rb/87Rbused > 85Rb/87Rbnatural (2.5970)13 and in some cases relatively little detail is provided.12,47 While this is less important for lowest-Rb/Sr minerals (e.g. carbonates), we want to highlight current inconsistencies whose impact may be particularly important for elevated Rb/Sr-material such as bioapatite (see below).
The extent of elemental fractionation during LA-MC-ICPMS analysis of apatite was assessed using matrix-matched Ca–P–(Si) STDP-glasses.35 It was found that the ‘true’/measured value for Rb/Sr-ratios for the three different STDP-compositions is 1.155 ± 0.023 (1 SD), which is unsurprising given the strong difference in volatility between Rb and Sr,48 affecting the elements differently during condensation from the laser-induced-plasma.49 Hence we utilize above factor during correction for 87Rb interference and thus also report more accurate sample Rb/Sr (85Rb/86Sr) ratios based on LA-MC-ICPMS (Tables S1 and S3 (ESI†)).
In line with the contrasting Pb-concentrations in SG85, strongly different inter & intra-tooth-87Sr/86Sr ratios are recorded for the early and late mineralizing teeth. The 1st molar (SG85-36) has a low 87Sr/86Sr ratio of 0.70731 ± 0.00003 (2 SE; TIMS msp, ∼720 μg), which compares well with the average from the rather uniform LA-MC-ICPMS profile analyzed in growth direction along the enamel-dentine-junction (EDJ; 0.70732 ± 0.00009; 2 SE). The corresponding 84Sr/86Sr ratio is 0.05650 ± 0.00002 (2 SE) and agrees well with the naturally invariant 84Sr/86Sr ratio;39 the 85Rb/86Sr ratio decreases slightly from ∼0.009 to 0.005.
Two fragments from near occlusal and cervical end of the 3rd molar (SG85-48, M3, wisdom tooth; no data available for the middle fragment) analyzed by TIMS-msp reveal much more radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr ratios of 0.71372 ± 0.00003 and 0.71289 ± 0.00003 (2 SE; 350 + 160 μg), respectively. In this case, the comparative LA-MC-ICPMS profile analyzed in growth direction is highly variable and reveals more fine detail. The initial 0.6 mm show 87Sr/86Sr values between 0.7132–0.7135, followed by a rapid rise to 0.7150 ± 0.0001 (∼2 mm), a further 0.35 mm wide peak (0.7165), before 87Sr/86Sr again decreases via a series of 3–4 ‘wiggles’ to 0.7127. Overall the 87Sr/86Sr data are in line with the TIMS msp data but this sample illustrates well the problem of defining equivalent volumes that allow unequivocal comparison between TIMS and LA data. Because of the observed intra-enamel variability combined with the complex enamel mineralization process along and across the EDJ (Fig. 1), uncertainties remain which parts to integrate across to obtain the best TIMS-msp value relative the narrow LA track. Despite considerable 87Sr/86Sr variability, the corresponding 84Sr/86Sr profile is flat throughout recording 0.05653 ± 0.00002, while the 85Rb/86Sr ratio varies considerably (0.0073–0.0047–0.0087–0.0055). Despite necessitating a substantial 87Rb-correction on 87Sr/86Sr, overall the 87Sr/86Sr ratio agreement between LA-MC-ICPMS and TIMS-msp for virtually homogenous M1 is excellent (within error) and for variable M3 highly satisfactory (see above); both also record accurate and spatially-invariant 84Sr/86Sr ratios.
The local 87Sr/86Sr range for Sulzburg can be approximated from both water and diagnetically-altered high-[Sr] bone samples, which are 0.7138 ± 0.0009 and 0.7148 ± 0.0009 (2 SD), respectively.52 These imply that the lowest-[Pb] childhood Sr-isotopic composition of SG85 (M1) is incompatible with that of mining village, strongly suggesting that individual SG85 was born elsewhere. In contrast, the adolescence 87Sr/86Sr-range recorded in the M3 agrees with Sulzburg values, implying that SG85 migrated there sometime between ∼4 and ∼9 years of age and became exposed to high-levels of Pb. The fairly unradiogenic M1 composition suggests carbonate-dominated soils as childhood home, and given the low value of 0.7073 it furthermore hints at Jurassic bedrock compositions.36,53
(1) Our shark-teeth Sr-isotope data obtained by LA-MC-ICPMS over a four-year period demonstrate accurate radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr and naturally-invariant 84Sr/86Sr-ratios, without any significant long-term trend. Not only high-[Sr] shark teeth, but also low-[Sr] human tooth enamel samples record accurate 84Sr/86Sr-ratios, showing that Ca-argide/dimers are negligible and Kr corrections valid.
(2) The external precision for 84Sr/86Sr in both solution and laser-ablation mode are essentially similar (±0.7‰; 2 SD), yet 87Sr/86Sr in laser-mode is about four times less reproducible (±0.075‰, 2 SD). While this is still satisfactory for many applications in view of the large natural 87Sr/86Sr variations, we attribute this deterioration mainly to slightly fluctuating on-peak 85Rb baselines not uncommon for volatile Rb, which may occur despite best efforts to introduce minimal Rb during instrument setup. This becomes significant mainly when dealing with low(est)-Rb/Sr samples such as shark teeth, silicate minerals or carbonates; for the latter we obtain broadly similar long-term precision during carbonate LA-MC-ICPMS Sr-isotope analysis.54
(3) We advocate the routine reporting of the non-radiogenic, invariant 84Sr/86Sr ratio (if ‘traditionally’ 88Sr/86Sr-normalized) for all samples and standards analyzed by LA-MC-ICPMS, which facilitates routine accuracy assessment of obtained data, akin to e.g. Hf-isotopes.32 Given the significant potential from unaccounted spectral interferences for inaccurate LA-MC-ICPMS Sr-isotope data, this opportunity should not be omitted and Sr-data without accurate 84Sr/86Sr ratios could be considered unreliable.
(4) Even though REE concentrations in modern or well-preserved fossil/archaeological bioapatite are exceedingly low (lowest-ppb range), doubly-charged REE (mainly Er, Yb) should be monitored at nominal half-mass(es), as any deviation from baseline values constitutes a simple yet powerful way to monitor the level of alteration in fossil samples.
(5) We find no evidence for significant polyatomic interferences, neither Ca-argides/dimers (cf. accurate 84Sr/86Sr ratios), nor any significant 40Ca31P16O at m/z = 87. The presence of the latter is testable via mass scan experiments at (pseudo)high mass resolution, but no evidence of a minor peak (shoulder) at slightly higher mass was found using either FAR or SEM, even when plasma conditions were deliberately detuned to simulate very high ThO+/Th+-ratios. This is in line with the lower metal-(cation)-oxide bond strengths of Ca+–O and P+–O (and likely even more so for triatomic CaPO) that are known to be correlated with metal-oxide production rates.29
(6) In view of the moderately elevated 85Rb/86Sr-ratios often typical of (bio)apatite, we focus on the accuracy of the 87Rb correction. We constrain both the effective 85Rb/87Rb-ratio in the presence of major Ca–P ions, as well as the extent of elemental Rb/Sr fractionation during laser-ablation, using matrix-matched phosphate glasses. The latter does not appear to have been sufficiently explored in previous LA-MC-ICPMS Sr-isotope analysis of (bio)apatite but is significant (∼15%), and in line with the strong volatility difference between Rb and Sr. Similar to the routine reporting of 84Sr/86Sr ratios, we propose that LA-MC-ICPMS Sr-isotope data routinely include corresponding85Rb/86Sr-ratios.
(7) We showcase our LA-MC-ICPMS Sr methodology via a case study of human teeth from a medieval German mining site, characterized by fairly elevated 85Rb/86Sr ∼0.005–0.009. One early and one late mineralizing molar of the same individual record highly variable intra/inter-enamel 87Sr/86Sr ratio profiles, while maintaining accurate invariant 84Sr/86Sr. We finally validate the accuracy of the LA 87Sr/86Sr ratios via comparative TIMS-microsampling Sr-isotope data. However, there is a limit in the usefulness of any LA vs. TIMS data comparison, owing to the complex enamel mineralization process with differently condensed time-series across and along enamel. It is evident that in case of highly variable intra-tooth 87Sr/86Sr ratios, it is difficult to define equivalent sample volumes, which in our view needs to be acknowledged when assessing the reliability of such comparisons.
The outlined methodology allows reliable, simple and fast spatially-resolved Sr isotope analysis, applicable to high-time resolution studies in palaeoecology, archaeology/anthropology or any (geological) sciences, whose potential overall has insufficiently been explored so far.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c5ja00311c |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016 |