Most of the naturally
occurring elements are mixtures of several isotopes. Of the carbon
found on this planet, 98.9% is carbon-12, or ,
which has six protons and six neutrons. (The atomic mass scale is
defined so that an atom of carbon- 12 weighs exactly 12 amu.) 1.1%
is carbon-13, with one additional neutron. Both of these isotopes
are stable, but carbon-14 is radioactive, and is present in minute
amounts only because it is being produced constantly by cosmic-ray
bombardment of nitrogen in the upper atmosphere. Carbon-14 is the
basis of radiocarbon dating. As long as a tree or other organism
is alive, it constantly takes in more carbon from its surroundings,
and the ratio of
to equals
that in the atmosphere as a whole. Radioactive decay and replenishment
from the atmosphere are in balance. When the tree dies, this intake
stops and what little carbon-14 it has begins to disappear. By measuring
the ratio of
to in a wood
or other carbon containing relic from an archaeological site, scientists
can calculate how long in the past the specimen ceased to be alive
and thus ceased to exchange with
its surroundings.