2015
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-9849-5_23
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UV-Spectral Luminescence Scanning: Technical Updates and Calibration Developments

Abstract: Spectral luminescence scanning (SLS) is a novel technique that uses a UV light source and line-scan camera to generate photoluminescence images of carbonate materials, such as corals. The camera in the Avaatech XRF core scanner records luminescence signals in three spectral domains of visual light, providing

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Bleaching removes contaminants and increases the luminescence intensity (Nagtegaal et al, 2012). The cleaned section was photographed under UV light (excitation wavelength 365 nm) using spectral line scanning (SLS) on an Avaatech XRF scanner (Grove et al, 2010(Grove et al, , 2015Tanzil et al, 2016). The light source and camera are moved down the core as one unit scanning multiple lines that are stitched together to produce a continuous image.…”
Section: Coral Collection Age Model and Luminescence Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bleaching removes contaminants and increases the luminescence intensity (Nagtegaal et al, 2012). The cleaned section was photographed under UV light (excitation wavelength 365 nm) using spectral line scanning (SLS) on an Avaatech XRF scanner (Grove et al, 2010(Grove et al, , 2015Tanzil et al, 2016). The light source and camera are moved down the core as one unit scanning multiple lines that are stitched together to produce a continuous image.…”
Section: Coral Collection Age Model and Luminescence Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of the five colonies sampled, two were previously stained with Alizarin Red S on 6 April 2014 and were used to verify the timing of banding patterns in the coral skeleton. The coral cores were cut into ≈7 mm thick slices and soaked in a 3-7% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) solution for 24-48 h to remove coral tissue and other surficial organics [19], ultrasonic cleaned with milli-Q water, and then air-dried prior to analyses.…”
Section: Coral Sampling and Processingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A ∼ 7 mm thick coral slab was obtained from a massive Porites sp. colony sampled from Kusu Island, Singapore (1°13′32″N, 103°51′35″E) and cleaned (mild oxidative treatment) for 24–48 h in a 1 : 5 mix of commercially available household bleach solution (NaOCl, 3–7% reactive chlorine) and water to remove surficial organic contaminants (Grove et al ). The coral slab was sonicated in deionized water for a total of 30 min (water changed every 10 min).…”
Section: Materials and Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%