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Dating methodology (archaeology)

 

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Dating methodology (archaeology)



 
 
Dating material drawn from the archaeological record
Archaeological record

The archaeological record is a term used in archaeology to denote all archaeological evidence, including the physical remains of past human activities which archaeologists seek out and record in an attempt to analyze and reconstruct the past....
 can made by a direct study of an artifact
Artifact (archaeology)

In archaeology, an artifact or artefact is any object made or modified by a human archaeological culture, and often one later recovered by some archaeological endeavor....
 or may be deduced by association
Archaeological association

Association in archaeology has more than one meaning and is confusing to the layman. Archaeology has been critiqued as a soft science with a somewhat poor standardization of terms....
 with materials found in the context
Archaeological context

In archaeology, not only the context of a discovery is a significant fact, but the formation of the context is as well. An archaeological context is an event in time which has been preserved in the archaeological record....
 the item is drawn from or inferred by its point of discovery in the sequence
Sequence (archaeological)

The archaeological sequence or sequence for short, on a specific archaeological site can be defined on two levels of rigour.# Normally it is adequate to equate it to archaeological record....
 relative to datable contexts. Dating is carried out mainly post excavation
Post excavation

In archaeology once the archaeological record of given site has been excavated, or collected from surface surveys, it is necessary to gain as much data as possible and organize it into a coherent body of information....
 but to support good practice some preliminary dating work called spot dating is usually run in tandem with excavation
Excavation

The term archaeological excavation has a double meaning.# Excavation is the best known and most commonly used within the science of archaeology....
. Dating is very important in archaeology for constructing models of the past, as it relies on the integrity of datable objects and samples.






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Dating material drawn from the archaeological record
Archaeological record

The archaeological record is a term used in archaeology to denote all archaeological evidence, including the physical remains of past human activities which archaeologists seek out and record in an attempt to analyze and reconstruct the past....
 can made by a direct study of an artifact
Artifact (archaeology)

In archaeology, an artifact or artefact is any object made or modified by a human archaeological culture, and often one later recovered by some archaeological endeavor....
 or may be deduced by association
Archaeological association

Association in archaeology has more than one meaning and is confusing to the layman. Archaeology has been critiqued as a soft science with a somewhat poor standardization of terms....
 with materials found in the context
Archaeological context

In archaeology, not only the context of a discovery is a significant fact, but the formation of the context is as well. An archaeological context is an event in time which has been preserved in the archaeological record....
 the item is drawn from or inferred by its point of discovery in the sequence
Sequence (archaeological)

The archaeological sequence or sequence for short, on a specific archaeological site can be defined on two levels of rigour.# Normally it is adequate to equate it to archaeological record....
 relative to datable contexts. Dating is carried out mainly post excavation
Post excavation

In archaeology once the archaeological record of given site has been excavated, or collected from surface surveys, it is necessary to gain as much data as possible and organize it into a coherent body of information....
 but to support good practice some preliminary dating work called spot dating is usually run in tandem with excavation
Excavation

The term archaeological excavation has a double meaning.# Excavation is the best known and most commonly used within the science of archaeology....
. Dating is very important in archaeology for constructing models of the past, as it relies on the integrity of datable objects and samples. Many disciplines of archaeological science
Archaeological science

Archaeological science, also known as archaeometry, consists of the application of scientific techniques and Scientific methodology to archaeology....
 are concerned with dating evidence.

Absolute vs relative dating


Absolute methods


Absolute dating
Absolute dating

Absolute dating is the process of determining a specific date for an archaeology or Palaeontology site or artifact. Some archaeologists prefer the terms chronometric or calendar dating, as use of the word "absolute" implies a certainty and precision that is rarely possible in archaeology....
 methods rely on using some physical property of an object or sample to calculate its age. Examples are:
  • Radiocarbon dating
    Radiocarbon dating

    Radiocarbon dating, or carbon dating, is a radiometric dating method that uses the naturally occurring radioisotope carbon-14 to determine the age of carbonaceous materials up to about 60,000 years....
     - for dating organic materials
  • Dendrochronology
    Dendrochronology

    Dendrochronology or tree-ring dating is the method of scientific dating based on the analysis of tree-ring growth patterns. This technique was developed during the first half of the 20th century originally by the astronomer A....
     - for dating trees, and objects made from wood, but also very important for calibrating radiocarbon dates
  • Thermoluminescence dating
    Thermoluminescence dating

    Thermoluminescence dating is the determination by means of measuring the accumulated radiation dose of the time elapsed since material containing crystalline minerals was either heated or exposed to sunlight ....
     - for dating inorganic material including ceramics
  • Optically stimulated luminescence
    Optically stimulated luminescence

    In physics Optically stimulated luminescence or is a method for measuring doses from ionizing radiation .The method makes use of electron trapped between the valence and electron band in the Crystal structure of certain types of matter ....
     or optical dating
    Optical dating

    Optical dating is a method of determining how long ago minerals were last exposed to daylight. It is useful to geologists and archaeologists who want to know when such an event occurred....
     for archaeological applications
  • Potassium-argon dating
    Potassium-argon dating

    Potassium-argon dating or K-Ar dating is a radiometric dating method used in geochronology and archeology. It is based on measuring the products of the radioactive decay of potassium , which is a common element found in materials such as micas, clay minerals, tephra, and evaporites....
     - for dating fossilized hominid
    Hominidae

    The Hominidae form a taxonomic biological family, including four extant genus: Homo s, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans.A number of known extinct genera are grouped with humans in the Hominina subtribe, others with orangutans in the Ponginae subtribe....
     remains
  • Numismatics
    Numismatics

    Numismatics is the study or collection of currency, including coins, tokens, paper money, and related objects. While numismatists are often characterized as students or collectors of coins, the discipline also includes a much larger study of payment-media used to resolve debts and the exchange of Good s....
     - many coins have the date of their production written on them
  • Magnetic Properties of Lead
    Lead

    Lead is a main-group Chemical element with symbol Pb and atomic number 82. Lead is a soft, malleable poor metal, also considered to be one of the heavy metal ....
     used to establish dates. Chemistry Professor Shimon Reich, a specialist in superconductivity, has demonstrated a method for dating artifacts based on the magnetic properties of lead, a material widely used in Israel and elsewhere in antiquity. Reich and coworkers found that at cryogenic temperatures, lead becomes a superconductor, but the corrosion products formed from centuries of exposure to air and water (lead oxide and lead carbonate) do not superconduct. On the basis of magnetic measurements and comparison with artifacts that were known (using other techniques) to be up to 2500 years old, the group showed that the mass of lead corrosion products is directly proportional to an object's age (New Journal of Physics, 2003, 5, 99)
  • Amino acid dating
    Amino acid dating

    Amino acid dating is a Dating methodology used to estimate the age of a specimen in paleobiology, archaeology, forensic science, and other fields....
  • Obsidian hydration dating
    Obsidian hydration dating

    Obsidian hydration dating is a geochemistry method of determining age in either absolute or relative terms of an artifact made of obsidian.Obsidian is a volcanic glass that was sometimes used as raw material for the manufacture of stone tools such as projectile points, knives, or other cutting tools through the process of flintknapper....
     - a geochemical
    Geochemistry

    The field of geochemistry involves study of the chemistry composition of the Earth and other planets, chemical processes and reactions that govern the composition of Rock s and soils, and the cycles of matter and energy that transport the Earth's chemical components in time and space, and their interaction with the hydrosphere and the atmosph...
     method of determining age in either absolute or relative terms of an artifact
    Artifact

    Artifact or artefact may refer to:* Artifact , any object made or modified by a human culture, and later recovered by an archaeological endeavor...
     made of obsidian
    Obsidian

    Obsidian is a naturally occurring glass formed as an extrusive igneous rock. It is produced when felsic lava extruded from a volcano cools without crystal growth....


Relative methods


Relative
Relative dating

Before the advent of absolute dating in the 20th century, archaeologists and geologists were largely limited to the use of relative dating techniques....
 or indirect methods tend to use associations built from the archaeological body of knowledge. An example is seriation
Seriation (archaeology)

In archaeology, seriation is a relative dating method in which assemblage or artifact from numerous sites, in the same culture, are placed in chronological order....
. Ultimately, relative dating relies on tying into absolute dating with reference to the present
Before Present

Before Present years are a time scale used in archaeology, geology, and other science disciplines to specify when events in the past occurred. Because the "present" time changes, standard practice is to use 1950 Common_Era as the arbitrary origin of the age scale....
. One example of this is dendrochronology
Dendrochronology

Dendrochronology or tree-ring dating is the method of scientific dating based on the analysis of tree-ring growth patterns. This technique was developed during the first half of the 20th century originally by the astronomer A....
 which uses a process of tying floating chronologies of tree rings together by cross referencing a body of work.

In practice several different dating techniques must be applied in some circumstances, thus dating evidence for much of an archaeological sequence recorded during excavation requires matching information from known absolute or some associated steps, with a careful study of stratigraphic relationships
Relationship (archaeology)

An archaeological relationship is the position in space and by implication, in time, of an object or Archaeological context with respect to another....
.

Age Equivalent Stratigraphic Markers


Palaeomagnetism: The polarity of the Earth
Earth

Earth is the third planet from the Sun. Earth is the largest of the terrestrial planets in the Solar System in diameter, mass and density. It is also referred to as the World and Wiktionary:Terra.Note that by International Astronomical Union convention, the term "Terra" is used for naming extensive land masses, rather...
 changes at a knowable rate. This polarity is stored within rocks, through this the rock can be dated

Tephrochronology
Tephrochronology

Tephrochronology is a Geochronology technique that utilises discrete layers of tephra—volcanic ash from a single eruption—to create a chronological framework in which Paleoenviroment or Archaeology records can be placed....
:
Volcanic ash has its own signature for each eruption. In a sedimentary sequence the associated material within the ash layer can be dated giving a date for the eruption. If this ash is found anywhere else in the world a date will already be known (bearing in mind transportation time).

Oxygen isotope chronostratigraphy: This is based on the climatic stages displayed in SPECMAP
SPECMAP

SPECMAP is the standard chronology for oxygen isotope records. This high resolution chronology was derived from several isotopic records, the composite curve was then smoothed, filtered and tuned to the known cycles of the astronomical variables....
 relating to different cold and warm stages experienced in deep time for example point 5.5 in the SPECMAP chronology describes the peak of the last interglacial
Interglacial

An interglacial is a geological interval of warmer global average temperature that separates glacial periods within an ice age. The current Holocene interglacial has persisted since the Pleistocene, about 11,400 years ago....
 125,000 years ago.

Stratigraphic relationships


Archaeologists investigating a site may wish to date the activity rather than artifacts on site by dating the individual context
Archaeological context

In archaeology, not only the context of a discovery is a significant fact, but the formation of the context is as well. An archaeological context is an event in time which has been preserved in the archaeological record....
s which represents events. Some degree of dating objects by their position in the sequence can be made with known datable elements of the archaeological record or other assumed datable contexts deduced by a regressive form of relative dating which in turn can fix events represented by contexts to some range in time. For example the date of formation of a context which is totally sealed between two datable layers will fall between the dates of the two layers sealing it. However the date of contexts often fall in a range of possibilities so using them to date others is not a straightforward process.

Take the hypothetical section
Archaeological section

In archaeology a section is a view in part of the Archaeological record showing it in the vertical plane, as a cross section , and thereby illustrating its profile and stratigraphy....
 fig A. Here we can see 12 contexts, each numbered with a unique context number
Single context recording

Single context recording was initially developed by Ed Harris and Patrick Ottaway in 1976, from a suggestion by Lawrence Keene. It was further developed by the Department of Urban Archaeology from where it was then exported, in the mid 1980s by Pete Clarke to the Scottish Urban Archaeological Trust and Nicky Pierce to the York Archaeological Tru...
 and whose sequence is represented in the Harris matrix
Harris matrix

The Harris matrix or Winchester seriation diagram is a tool used to depict the temporal succession of archaeological contexts and thus the sequence of deposition on a 'dry land' archaeological site....
 in fig B.
  1. A horizontal layer
  2. Masonry wall remnant
  3. Backfill of the wall construction trench (sometimes called construction cut)
  4. A horizontal layer, probably the same as 1
  5. Construction cut for wall 2
  6. A clay floor abutting
    Relationship (archaeology)

    An archaeological relationship is the position in space and by implication, in time, of an object or Archaeological context with respect to another....
     wall 2
  7. Fill of shallow cut 8
  8. Shallow pit cut
  9. A horizontal layer
  10. A horizontal layer, probably the same as 9
  11. Natural sterile ground formed before human occupation of the site
  12. Trample in the base of cut 5 formed by workmen's boots constructing the structure wall 2 and floor 6 is associated
    Archaeological association

    Association in archaeology has more than one meaning and is confusing to the layman. Archaeology has been critiqued as a soft science with a somewhat poor standardization of terms....
     with.


If we know the date of context 1 and context 9 we can deduce that context 7, the backfilling of pit 8, occurred sometime after the date for 9 but before the date for 1, and if we recover an assemblage
Assemblage

An assemblage is an archaeology term meaning a group of different Artifact s found in archaeological association with one another, that is, in the same Archaeological context....
 of artifacts from context 7 that occur nowhere else in the sequence, we have isolated them with a reasonable degree of certainty to a discrete range of time. In this instance we can now use the date we have for finds in context 7 to date other sites and sequences. In practice a huge amount of cross referencing with other recorded sequences is required to produce dating series from stratigraphic relationships such as the work in seriation
Seriation (archaeology)

In archaeology, seriation is a relative dating method in which assemblage or artifact from numerous sites, in the same culture, are placed in chronological order....
.

Residual and intrusive Finds


One issue in using stratigraphic relationships is that the date of artifacts in a context does not represent the date of the context, but just the earliest date the context could be. If we look at the sequence in fig A we may find that the cut for the construction of wall 2, context 5, has cut through layers 9 and 10 and in doing so has introduced the possibility that artifacts from layers 9 and 10 may be redeposited higher up the sequence
Relationship (archaeology)

An archaeological relationship is the position in space and by implication, in time, of an object or Archaeological context with respect to another....
 in the context representing the backfill of the construction cut, context 3. These artifacts are referred to as "residual" or "residual finds". It is crucial that dating a context is based on the latest dating evidence drawn from the context. We can also see that if the fill of cut 5 — the wall 2, backfill 3 and trample 12 — are not removed entirely during excavation because of "undercutting
Excavation

The term archaeological excavation has a double meaning.# Excavation is the best known and most commonly used within the science of archaeology....
", non-residual artifacts from these later "higher" contexts 2, 3 and 12 could contaminate the excavation of earlier contexts such as 9 and 10 and give false dating information these artifacts may be termed intrusive finds.

See also

  • Harris matrix
    Harris matrix

    The Harris matrix or Winchester seriation diagram is a tool used to depict the temporal succession of archaeological contexts and thus the sequence of deposition on a 'dry land' archaeological site....
  • Obsidian hydration dating
    Obsidian hydration dating

    Obsidian hydration dating is a geochemistry method of determining age in either absolute or relative terms of an artifact made of obsidian.Obsidian is a volcanic glass that was sometimes used as raw material for the manufacture of stone tools such as projectile points, knives, or other cutting tools through the process of flintknapper....
  • Vole Clock
    Vole Clock

    The Vole clock is a method of dating archaeological strata. Investigations at sites across Europe have allowed construction of a detailed framework of how different vole species evolved over the last million years, and where and when specific species became extinct....
  • Oxidizable Carbon Ratio dating
    Oxidizable carbon ratio dating

    Oxidizable carbon ratio dating is a method of dating in archeology that can be used to derive the age of charcoal samples up to 35,000 years old....


Literature


  • M. Jacoby, Chemistry in the Holy Land, Chemical & Engineering News, 5 March 2007, page 20, published by American Chemical Society