How To Take An OSL Sample
How To Take An OSL Sample
Items to bring:
1. opaque metal conduit (DO NOT USE PVC)
purchased and cut at hardware store, 1.5” x 8”
ideally, may need end filed to sharpen
2. hammer to pound tube into outcrop
3. quart ziplock bags to collect dose-rate samples
4. film container (or other airtight) to collect
for water content
5. duct tape to cap sample tube
6. good luxuries = pounding caps (pipe ends),
styrofoam insulation plug in tube to prevent
mixing of sediment, plastic caps (Giddings core-
end caps), packing tape
Step 1: position
Target fine-medium sand with original sedimentary
structures, avoiding bioturbation and soils. If possible,
sample a thick unit, or at a point with relatively uniform
sediment within a foot radius. Also best if sample is
more than 1 m below the landform top to minimize
cosmogenic dose errors.
Place sharpened end of tube, with styrofoam plug, at
target point. Align tube at angle desired. Place
pounding cap over other end, using a round of duct tape
to hold it on during pounding.
Step 2: hammer
Pound sample tube into outcrop until you feel and
hear change indicating tube is full, or until tube is at
least flush with the outcrop face. Tube must be full and
packed tightly to avoid mixing during transport.
Step 3: moisture
Sample horizon for moisture content using an air-
tight container, such as a film canister. Fill completely.
Note evidence for ground or vadose water and describe
expected water content history of the sampled deposit.
Step 4: doserate
Sample for the environmental doserate into a 1-
quart ziplock freezer bag. Representatively capture
sediment from ~1 foot radius surrounding the sample,
being particularly complete nearer the tube. This effort
also provides headway towards digging out the sample
tube from cohesive sediment. Fill bag half full or more.
Step 8: tape
Consider putting clear packaging tape over tube and
baggie labels to protect marker from wearing off and
becoming indecipherable.
Step 9: package
Also consider throwing the tube, moisture, and dose
rate sample components into a separate large ziplock
baggie for orderly transport.