TY - JOUR
T1 - How 14C dates on wood charcoal increase precision when dating colonization
T2 - The examples of Iceland and Polynesia
AU - Schmid, Magdalena M.E.
AU - Dugmore, Andrew J.
AU - Foresta, Luca
AU - Newton, Anthony J.
AU - Vésteinsson, Orri
AU - Wood, Rachel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2018/10
Y1 - 2018/10
N2 - Archaeological chronologies use many radiocarbon (14C) dates, some of which may be misleading. Strict ‘chronometric hygiene’ protocols, which aim to enhance the overall accuracy and precision of 14C datasets by removing all potentially problematic samples, mean that so few dates remain in some locations that accurate chronologies cannot be established. 14C dates on charcoal can be affected by an ‘old-wood’ effect, and so they are often removed from analyses, despite >40,000 being available worldwide, representing > $25 million. We show that when a Bayesian chronological model is used, which incorporates an Outlier Model specific to wood charcoal, the 14C dataset of Iceland's Viking Age settlement agrees well with ice core-dated tephrochronology and written sources. Greatest accuracy comes from an even temporal distribution of 14C dates and more dates lead to greater precision (<20 years). This shows how charcoal-based 14C chronologies can pinpoint the transformational human settlement of islands in the Atlantic, Oceania, and elsewhere.
AB - Archaeological chronologies use many radiocarbon (14C) dates, some of which may be misleading. Strict ‘chronometric hygiene’ protocols, which aim to enhance the overall accuracy and precision of 14C datasets by removing all potentially problematic samples, mean that so few dates remain in some locations that accurate chronologies cannot be established. 14C dates on charcoal can be affected by an ‘old-wood’ effect, and so they are often removed from analyses, despite >40,000 being available worldwide, representing > $25 million. We show that when a Bayesian chronological model is used, which incorporates an Outlier Model specific to wood charcoal, the 14C dataset of Iceland's Viking Age settlement agrees well with ice core-dated tephrochronology and written sources. Greatest accuracy comes from an even temporal distribution of 14C dates and more dates lead to greater precision (<20 years). This shows how charcoal-based 14C chronologies can pinpoint the transformational human settlement of islands in the Atlantic, Oceania, and elsewhere.
KW - Bayesian Outlier models
KW - C samples with inbuilt age
KW - Chronometric hygiene
KW - Island archaeology
KW - OxCal_parser
KW - Tephrochronology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85051642974&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.quageo.2018.07.015
DO - 10.1016/j.quageo.2018.07.015
M3 - Article
SN - 1871-1014
VL - 48
SP - 64
EP - 71
JO - Quaternary Geochronology
JF - Quaternary Geochronology
ER -