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Potassium-Argon (K-Ar) Dating

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    We know that an
    element is defined
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    by the number of protons it has.
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    For example, potassium.
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    We look at the periodic
    table of elements.
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    And I have a snapshot of
    it, of not the entire table
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    but part of it here.
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    Potassium has 19 protons.
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    And we could write it like this.
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    And this is a little
    bit redundant.
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    We know that if it's potassium
    that atom has 19 protons.
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    And we know if an
    atom has 19 protons
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    it is going to be potassium.
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    Now, we also know that not all
    of the atoms of a given element
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    have the same
    number of neutrons.
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    And when we talk
    about a given element,
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    but we have different
    numbers of neutrons
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    we call them isotopes
    of that element.
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    So for example,
    potassium can come
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    in a form that has
    exactly 20 neutrons.
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    And we call that potassium-39.
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    And 39, this mass
    number, it's a count
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    of the 19 protons
    plus 20 neutrons.
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    And this is actually the most
    common isotope of potassium.
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    It accounts for, I'm
    just rounding off,
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    93.3% of the potassium that
    you would find on Earth.
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    Now, some of the other
    isotopes of potassium.
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    You also have potassium--
    and once again writing
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    the K and the 19 are a
    little bit redundant--
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    you also have potassium-41.
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    So this would have 22 neutrons.
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    22 plus 19 is 41.
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    This accounts for about 6.7%
    of the potassium on the planet.
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    And then you have a
    very scarce isotope
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    of potassium called
    potassium-40.
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    Potassium-40 clearly
    has 21 neutrons.
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    And it's very, very,
    very, very scarce.
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    It accounts for only 0.0117%
    of all the potassium.
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    But this is also the
    isotope of potassium
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    that's interesting to us
    from the point of view
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    of dating old, old rock, and
    especially old volcanic rock.
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    And as we'll see, when you
    can date old volcanic rock
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    it allows you to date
    other types of rock
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    or other types of fossils
    that might be sandwiched
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    in between old volcanic rock.
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    And so what's really interesting
    about potassium-40 here
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    is that it has a half-life
    of 1.25 billion years.
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    So the good thing about
    that, as opposed to something
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    like carbon-14, it can
    be used to date really,
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    really, really old things.
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    And every 1.25
    billion years-- let
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    me write it like this,
    that's its half-life--
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    so 50% of any given
    sample will have decayed.
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    And 11% will have
    decayed into argon-40.
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    So argon is right over here.
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    It has 18 protons.
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    So when you think about
    it decaying into argon-40,
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    what you see is that
    it lost a proton,
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    but it has the same mass number.
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    So one of the protons must of
    somehow turned into a neutron.
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    And it actually captures
    one of the inner electrons,
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    and then it emits
    other things, and I
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    won't go into all the
    quantum physics of it,
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    but it turns into argon-40.
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    And 89% turn into calcium-40.
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    And you see calcium on the
    periodic table right over here
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    has 20 protons.
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    So this is a situation
    where one of the neutrons
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    turns into a proton.
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    This is a situation
    where one of the protons
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    turns into a neutron.
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    And what's really
    interesting to us
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    is this part right over here.
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    Because what's cool about argon,
    and we study this a little bit
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    in the chemistry playlist, it is
    a noble gas, it is unreactive.
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    And so when it is embedded
    in something that's
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    in a liquid state it'll
    kind of just bubble out.
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    It's not bonded to
    anything, and so it'll just
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    bubble out and just go
    out into the atmosphere.
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    So what's interesting
    about this whole situation
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    is you can imagine what happens
    during a volcanic eruption.
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    Let me draw a volcano here.
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    So let's say that
    this is our volcano.
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    And it erupts at some
    time in the past.
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    So it erupts, and you have
    all of this lava flowing.
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    That lava will contain some
    amount of potassium-40.
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    And actually, it'll
    already contain
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    some amount of argon-40.
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    But what's neat
    about argon-40 is
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    that while it's lava, while it's
    in this liquid state-- so let's
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    imagine this lava
    right over here.
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    It's a bunch of stuff
    right over here.
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    I'll do the potassium-40.
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    And let me do it in a color
    that I haven't used yet.
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    I'll do the
    potassium-40 in magenta.
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    It'll have some
    potassium-40 in it.
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    I'm maybe over doing it.
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    It's a very scarce isotope.
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    But it'll have some
    potassium-40 in it.
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    And it might already have some
    argon-40 in it just like that.
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    But argon-40 is a noble gas.
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    It's not going to bond anything.
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    And while this lava
    is in a liquid state
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    it's going to be
    able to bubble out.
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    It'll just float to the top.
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    It has no bonds.
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    And it'll just evaporate.
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    I shouldn't say evaporate.
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    It'll just bubble
    out essentially,
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    because it's not
    bonded to anything,
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    and it'll sort of just seep out
    while we are in a liquid state.
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    And what's really
    interesting about that
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    is that when you have
    these volcanic eruptions,
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    and because this argon-40
    is seeping out, by the time
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    this lava has hardened
    into volcanic rock--
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    and I'll do that volcanic
    rock in a different color.
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    By the time it has
    hardened into volcanic rock
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    all of the argon-40
    will be gone.
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    It won't be there anymore.
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    And so what's neat is, this
    volcanic event, the fact
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    that this rock
    has become liquid,
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    it kind of resets the
    amount of argon-40 there.
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    So then you're only going to
    be left with potassium-40 here.
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    And that's why the argon-40
    is more interesting,
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    because the calcium-40 won't
    necessarily have seeped out.
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    And there might have already
    been calcium-40 here.
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    So it won't
    necessarily seep out.
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    But the argon-40 will seep out.
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    So it kind of resets it.
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    The volcanic event resets
    the amount of argon-40.
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    So right when the
    event happened,
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    you shouldn't have any argon-40
    right when that lava actually
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    becomes solid.
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    And so if you fast forward
    to some future date,
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    and if you look at the sample--
    let me copy and paste it.
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    So if you fast forward to
    some future date, and you
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    see that there is some
    argon-40 there, in that sample,
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    you know this is
    a volcanic rock.
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    You know that it was due to
    some previous volcanic event.
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    You know that this argon-40 is
    from the decayed potassium-40.
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    And you know that it has decayed
    since that volcanic event,
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    because if it was there before
    it would have seeped out.
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    So the only way that this would
    have been able to get trapped
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    is, while it was liquid
    it would seep out,
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    but once it's solid it can
    get trapped inside the rock.
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    And so you know the only
    way this argon-40 can
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    exist there is by decay
    from that potassium-40.
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    So you can look at the ratio.
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    So you know for every
    one of these argon-40's,
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    because only 11% of the decay
    products are argon-40's,
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    for every one of
    those you must have
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    on the order of about nine
    calcium-40's that also decayed.
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    And so for every one of these
    argon-40's you know that there
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    must have been 10
    original potassium-40's.
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    And so what you
    can do is you can
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    look at the ratio of the
    number of potassium-40's there
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    are today to the number
    that there must have been,
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    based on this evidence right
    over here, to actually date it.
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    And in the next
    video I'll actually
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    go through the
    mathematical calculation
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    to show you that you
    can actually date it.
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    And the reason this
    is really useful
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    is, you can look
    at those ratios.
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    And volcanic eruptions
    aren't happening every day,
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    but if you start looking over
    millions and millions of years,
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    on that time scale,
    they're actually
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    happening reasonably frequent.
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    And so let's dig in the ground.
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    So let's say this is the
    ground right over here.
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    And you dig enough and you
    see a volcanic eruption,
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    you see some volcanic
    rock right over there,
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    and then you dig even more.
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    There's another layer of
    volcanic rock right over there.
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    So this is another
    layer of volcanic rock.
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    So they're all going to have a
    certain amount of potassium-40
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    in it.
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    This is going to have some
    amount of potassium-40 in it.
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    And then let's say this one
    over here has more argon-40.
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    This one has a little bit less.
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    And using the math that we're
    going to do in the next video,
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    let's say you're
    able to say that this
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    is, using the half-life, and
    using the ratio of argon-40
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    that's left, or using the
    ratio of the potassium-40 left
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    to what you know was there
    before, you say that this must
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    have solidified 100
    million years ago, 100
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    million years
    before the present.
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    And you know that this layer
    right over here solidified.
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    Let's say, you know it
    solidified about 150
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    million years
    before the present.
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    And let's say you feel pretty
    good that this soil hasn't been
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    dug up and mixed or
    anything like that.
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    It looks like it's been
    pretty untouched when
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    you look at these soil
    samples right over here.
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    And let's say you see
    some fossils in here.
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    Then, even though carbon-14
    dating is kind of useless,
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    really, when you get
    beyond 50,000 years,
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    you see these fossils in
    between these two periods.
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    It's a pretty good
    indicator, if you
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    can assume that this soil hasn't
    been dug around and mixed,
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    that this fossil is
    between 100 million and 150
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    million years old.
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    This event happened.
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    Then you have these
    fossils got deposited.
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    These animals died, or
    they lived and they died.
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    And then you had this
    other volcanic event.
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    So it allows you, even though
    you're only directly dating
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    the volcanic rock,
    it allows you,
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    when you look at the layers,
    to relatively date things
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    in between those layer.
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    So it isn't just about
    dating volcanic rock.
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    It allows us to date things
    that are very, very, very old
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    and go way further back in time
    than just carbon-14 dating.
Title:
Potassium-Argon (K-Ar) Dating
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
10:35

English subtitles

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