“…In general, it is fair to say that the effects of syndepositional contamination, habitat biases, bioturbation, and post‐depositional overprinting/preservation have been relatively under‐studied, largely due to the relatively large sample sizes needed for radiocarbon analyses, even with accelerator mass spectrometry methods. However, this is set to change with the advent of accurate gas‐source AMS methods capable of routinely measuring very small aliquots of carbon (e.g., single foraminifera; Fagault et al., 2019; Wacker et al., 2013), potentially in sequential or continuous fashion (e.g., on carbonate leachates, or by laser‐ablation; Ausín et al., 2019; Missiaen et al., 2020; Welte et al., 2016). Thus, age distributions for fossil entities (Dolman et al., 2021; Fagault et al., 2019), or age biases in sample leachates (Ausín et al., 2019; Missiaen et al., 2020), might be used to inform on the effects of bioturbation, population sampling, preservation or diagenesis.…”