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Radiocarbon Dating of the Western European Neolithic: Comparison of the Dates on Bones and Dates on Charcoals
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2016
Abstract
The subject of this article is the radiocarbon dating on bones in the western European Neolithic. By gathering 14C dates for 2 examples, one chosen in the middle Neolithic of the Rhine region and the other in the end of the early Neolithic in the same region and in the Paris Basin, a significant gap appears between the sum probabilities of dates on charcoals and the ones obtained with bones. A comparison between these results with the few available dendrochronological dates shows that dates on bones seem too young, while the sequence based on charcoals fits. The existence of too-young 14C dates of bones is not new: this phenomenon was already indicated in previous studies. Most explanations agree that there was a source of contamination, during the sample's burial or its treatment in laboratory. These examples illustrate that consequences can be heavy on a chronology built, partly or entirely, on 14C dates of bones.
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- How Good Are 14C Ages of Bones? Problems and Methods Applied
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- Copyright © 2009 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona
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