Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T05:02:12.284Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

To date or not to date? A comparison of different 14C pretreatment methods applied to archeological marine shells from Vale Boi (Portugal)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2024

Dragana Paleček*
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry Giacomo Ciamician, Alma Mater Studiorum – University of Bologna, Via Selmi 2, 40126 Bologna, Italy
Giuseppe Falini
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry Giacomo Ciamician, Alma Mater Studiorum – University of Bologna, Via Selmi 2, 40126 Bologna, Italy
Lukas Wacker
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Ion Beam Physics, ETH Zürich, 8093 Zürich, Switzerland
Marcello A. Mannino
Affiliation:
Department of Archeology and Heritage Studies, Aarhus University, Moesgård Allé 20, 8270 Højbjerg, Denmark
Nuno Bicho
Affiliation:
Interdisciplinary Centre for Archaeology and the Evolution of Human Behavior, Universidade do Algarve, Faro, Portugal
João Cascalheira
Affiliation:
Interdisciplinary Centre for Archaeology and the Evolution of Human Behavior, Universidade do Algarve, Faro, Portugal
Alessandro G. Rombolà
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry Giacomo Ciamician, Alma Mater Studiorum – University of Bologna, Via Selmi 2, 40126 Bologna, Italy
Daniele Fabbri
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry Giacomo Ciamician, Alma Mater Studiorum – University of Bologna, Via Selmi 2, 40126 Bologna, Italy
Sahra Talamo
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry Giacomo Ciamician, Alma Mater Studiorum – University of Bologna, Via Selmi 2, 40126 Bologna, Italy
*
Corresponding author: Dragana Paleček; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Mollusk shells are often found in archeological sites, given their great preservation potential and high value as a multipurpose resource, and they can often be the only available materials useful for radiocarbon (14C) dating. However, dates obtained from shells are often regarded as less reliable compared to those from bones, wood, or charcoals due to different factors (e.g., Isotope fractionation, reservoir effects etc.). The standard acid etching pretreatment for mollusk shells is the most used in many 14C laboratories, although another protocol known as CarDS (Carbonate Density Separation) was introduced just over a decade ago. We compare these two methods with two newly proposed methods for intracellular organic matrix extraction. We applied all four methods to samples selected from different archeological layers of the well-known Upper Paleolithic site of Vale Boi, rich in mollusk specimens throughout the stratigraphic sequence. Here we compare our results to previous dates to determine which of these pretreatment methods results in the most reliable 14C dates. Based on the results of this study, all four methods gave inconsistent ages compared to previous dates and the stratigraphic attribution.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona

Introduction

Mollusk shells are often found in archeological sites, given their great preservation potential and high value as a multipurpose resource. Some mollusk species were used as food, others to make tools such as scrapers or decorative beads for ornamental purposes (Bicho and Haws Reference Bicho and Haws2008; Cascalheira et al. Reference Cascalheira, Bicho, Marreiros, Pereira, Évora, Cortés, Gibaja Bao, Manne, Regala and Gonçalves2012; Douka Reference Douka2011; Tátá et al. Reference Tátá, Cascalheira, Marreiros, Pereira and Bicho2014). Mollusk shells provide high-resolution records of past environmental conditions and fluctuations, which are reflected in the carbonate structure as variable growth rates and chemical properties (Schöne Reference Schöne2008). Shell stable isotopes are used to estimate and reconstruct paleoenvironmental conditions, namely temperature, precipitation-evaporation patterns, upwelling intensity, and primary productivity (Elliot et al. Reference Elliot, Welsh, Chilcott, McCulloch, Chappell and Ayling2009; Jones and Allmon Reference Jones and Allmon1995; Milano et al. Reference Milano, Schöne, González-Morales and Gutiérrez-Zugasti2022; Milano et al. Reference Milano, Schöne and Gutiérrez-Zugasti2020; Sadler et al. Reference Sadler, Carré, Azzoug, Schauer, Ledesma, Cardenas, Chase, Bentaleb, Muller, Mandeng and Rohling2012; Schöne et al. Reference Schöne, Freyre Castro, Fiebig, Houk, Oschmann and Kröncke2004). Apart from past environmental conditions, shell remains represent a record of the evolutionary history of different human populations, their adaptation strategies, dietary habits, and symbolic thinking (Ramos-Muñoz et al. Reference Ramos-Muñoz, Cantillo-Duarte, Bernal-Casasola, Barrena-Tocino, Domínguez-Bella, Vijande-Vila, Clemente-Conte, Gutiérrez-Zugasti, Soriguer-Escofet and Almisas-Cruz2016; Will et al. Reference Will, Kandel and Conard2019; Zilhão et al. Reference Zilhão, Angelucci, Badal-García, D’Errico, Daniel, Dayet, Douka, Higham, Martínez-Sánchez, Montes-Bernárdez and Murcia-Mascarós2010). Due to the elevated preservation potential of the carbonate crystalline structure, shells can often be the only available materials at archeological sites useful for 14C dating (Brumm et al. Reference Brumm, Hakim, Ramli, Aubert, van den Bergh, Li, Burhan, Saiful, Siagian, Sardi and Jusdi2018; Douka et al. Reference Douka, Bergman, Hedges, Wesselingh and Higham2013; Ono et al. Reference Ono, Soegondho and Yoneda2009). However, dating only shells can lead to misinterpretations due to various potential issues that can arise before and during sample analysis and calibration. Firstly, it is important to perform careful sample selection, both considering the preservation state in terms of diagenesis and time averaging, as well as species selection which could potentially create a difference between the target event and the dated event. Furthermore, there can be issues during sample pretreatment and dating, which can cause insufficient contamination removal or the introduction of exogenous contaminant carbon during analysis and processing. Finally, there are several corrections that are necessary to perform on the obtained radiocarbon date to have a calibrated age (such as isotope fractionation, the marine reservoir effect for marine species and the freshwater effect for riverine species). If all these issues are not considered when performing analysis on shells, it can lead to misinterpretations not only of the archeological context of the site, but also erroneous conclusions about migration events in human evolution. One example is the debate on the site of Ksar Akil in Lebanon which highlights the issue of using only shells when constructing a site chronology (Bosch et al. Reference Bosch, Mannino, Prendergast, O’Connell, Demarchi, Taylor, Niven, van der Plicht and Hublin2015; Douka et al. Reference Douka, Bergman, Hedges, Wesselingh and Higham2013). In Ksar Akil, the human remains and any other organic material, were too degraded to perform 14C dating, and the only other available material was mollusk shells (Bosch et al. Reference Bosch, Mannino, Prendergast, O’Connell, Demarchi, Taylor, Niven, van der Plicht and Hublin2015; Douka et al. Reference Douka, Bergman, Hedges, Wesselingh and Higham2013). The results from Douka et al. (Reference Douka, Bergman, Hedges, Wesselingh and Higham2013) placed the specimens as roughly contemporaneous to the oldest corresponding remains in Europe, thus casting doubts on the Levant as the point of origin for the dispersal of Upper Paleolithic culture into Europe. On the other hand, Bosch et al. (Reference Bosch, Mannino, Prendergast, O’Connell, Demarchi, Taylor, Niven, van der Plicht and Hublin2015) showed that the human remains from Ksar Akil predate the European Upper Paleolithic as previously thought, confirming the hypothesis of the Levant as the starting dispersal point of Upper Paleolithic culture into Europe (Belfer-Cohen and Goring-Morris 2012; Bosch et al. Reference Bosch, Mannino, Prendergast, O’Connell, Demarchi, Taylor, Niven, van der Plicht and Hublin2015; Hublin Reference Hublin2012). The two studies used different shell pretreatment methods and sample selection criteria, which might have been part of the reason behind the discrepancy of the dates. The sample preservation state was also different, as one study used ornamental shells, while the other used shells collected for consumption (Bosch et al. Reference Bosch, Mannino, Prendergast, O’Connell, Demarchi, Taylor, Niven, van der Plicht and Hublin2015; Douka et al. Reference Douka, Bergman, Hedges, Wesselingh and Higham2013). As demonstrated by this debate, dates obtained only on shells can cause changes in important scenarios that can alter our understanding of events in human evolution. This emphasizes the crucial need to improve the accuracy of the chronometric results and to increase the reliability of shells as suitable dating materials.

Although the 14C dating of shells has been improved over the years (Alves et al. Reference Alves, Macario, Ascough and Bronk Ramsey2018; Douka et al. Reference Douka, Higham and Hedges2010b; Faivre et al. Reference Faivre, Bakran-Petricioli, Barešić and Horvatinčić2015; Lindauer Reference Lindauer2019; Philippsen Reference Philippsen2013; Pigati Reference Pigati2002; Reimer and Reimer Reference Reimer and Reimer2001; Reimer and Reimer Reference Reimer and Reimer2017; Russell et al. Reference Russell, Cook, Ascough, Barrett and Dugmore2011), there are still issues hindering the reliability of the chronometric data. In shells, there is a complex organization of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) units and organic compounds with extraordinary resistance to mechanical and chemical stresses (Barthelat Reference Barthelat2010). Yet, over long timescales, diagenesis can still alter their material properties. The primary carbonate phase, often aragonite, can recrystallize into secondary calcite after deposition. During the dissolution and precipitation of secondary calcite, there can be an incorporation of exogenous carbon into the sample. This is one of the processes which can cause a difference in the isotopic composition of the secondary phase compared to the primary one and alter the 14C signal and therefore the resulting age (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a). Sand blasting and abrasion were thought to remove surface contamination and altered portions, assumed to also be concentrated mainly on the outer portion of the shells. Furthermore, chemical etching is used in attempts to remove shell portions altered by diagenesis from the 14C dating analysis, which is performed on the entire carbonate fraction. This method has been widely used since the first applications of 14C dating on marine shells, and variations of it are still applied in most laboratories around the world (Brock et al. Reference Brock, Higham, Ditchfield and Bronk Ramsey2010; Busschers et al. Reference Busschers, Wesselingh, Kars, Versluijs-Helder, Wallinga, Bosch, Timmner, Nierop, Meijer and Bunnik2014; Chappell and Polach Reference Chappell and Polach1972; Dee et al. Reference Dee, Palstra, Aerts-Bijma, Bleeker, de Bruijn, Ghebru, Jansen, Kuitems, Paul, Richie and Spriensma2019; Gillespie et al. Reference Gillespie, Hedges and Humm1986; Santos et al. Reference Santos, Southon, Druffel-Rodriguez, Griffin and Mazon2004). However, the acid etching of the shell surface is not entirely successful in removing altered portions of the shell due to the higher solubility of aragonite compared to calcite and the localized effect of the pretreatment. A novel pretreatment protocol using Carbonate Density Separation (CarDS) was developed by Douka and colleagues in 2010 (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a; Russo et al. Reference Russo, Tripp, Douka and Higham2010). This method showed promising results for the removal of secondary calcite from diagenetically altered corals and mollusk shells for 14C dating, representing the most recent innovation in this area. It aims to separate the primary and secondary phase based on their different densities, in order to remove all the potentially contaminated secondary carbonate, not just from the surface, thus potentially obtaining a more accurate date for the sample (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a; Russo et al. Reference Russo, Tripp, Douka and Higham2010). However, diagenetic processes can often occur without a change in carbonate polymorphs, meaning that aragonite cannot be automatically considered the primary phase and the mere determination of the carbonate polymorph is not indicative of the presence or amount of diagenesis in the sample (Guzmán et al. Reference Guzmán, Dauphin, Cuif, Denis and Ortlieb2009; Perrin Reference Perrin2004; Toffolo Reference Toffolo2021). Although there are studies focusing on the pretreatment of the mineral fraction of the shell, the organic fraction was largely overlooked as it represents a minor portion of the shell (Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis and Cherkinsky2018; Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis, Cherkinsky, Ritchison, Lulewicz and Thompson2019). The main source of carbon in the mineral portion of the shell is the Dissolved Inorganic Carbon (DIC) with a contribution of a small amount of metabolic carbon as well (Gillikin et al. Reference Gillikin, Lorrain, Bouillon, Willenz and Dehairs2006; Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis and Cherkinsky2018; McConnaughey and Gillikin Reference McConnaughey and Gillikin2008). Carbon of dietary origin is divided between the soft tissues of the mollusk and the shell organic matrix, which was found to be synthetized using mainly carbon from Particulate Organic Carbon (POC; Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis and Cherkinsky2018). A recent study found that the organic intracrystalline matrix plays an important role in the diagenetic mineralogical transformation (Milano and Nehrke Reference Milano and Nehrke2018). Their results state that the amount and composition of the organic portion of the shell influence the temperature at which the thermally induced transformation from aragonite to calcite occurs. Furthermore, the intracrystalline organic matrix is a closed system that was found to be isolated from the environment (Penkman et al. Reference Penkman, Kaufman, Maddy and Collins2008) making isotopic exchange between the atmosphere and the intracrystalline organic matrix after deposition unlikely. However, attempts to date the organic matrix fraction are scarce and on much younger shells (Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis and Cherkinsky2018; Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis, Cherkinsky, Ritchison, Lulewicz and Thompson2019). Therefore, investigating the 14C signal output of the organic matrix and comparing the results with outputs of the established methods could allow us to potentially improve the accuracy of the chronometric results and increase the reliability of shells as suitable dating materials.

Site under investigation

The archeological site of Vale Boi is a well-known Upper Paleolithic site in southwestern Portugal rich in mollusk shells, making it a great site to use for such methodological experiments. This site is situated between two different environments: the Mediterranean and Atlantic coasts, and it represents the earliest recorded modern human occupation in southwestern Portugal, as attested by the Early Gravettian remains dated to c. 32 ka cal BP (Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013). It has a long stratigraphic sequence spanning from the early Gravettian, Proto-Solutrean, Solutrean, and Magdalenian (Cascalheira et al. Reference Cascalheira, Bicho, Marreiros, Pereira, Évora, Cortés, Gibaja Bao, Manne, Regala and Gonçalves2012; Manne et al. Reference Manne, Cascalheira, Évora, Marreiros and Bicho2012; Marreiros et al. Reference Marreiros, Bicho, Gibaja, Pereira and Cascalheira2015). Previous studies found evidence of multiple human occupations at this site, proving that it was most likely a seasonal residential camp with a combination of exogenous and regional cultural traits and a diversified use and processing of available resources including mollusk shells (Bicho and Haws Reference Bicho and Haws2008; Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013; Cascalheira et al. Reference Cascalheira, Bicho, Marreiros, Pereira, Évora, Cortés, Gibaja Bao, Manne, Regala and Gonçalves2012; Manne et al. Reference Manne, Cascalheira, Évora, Marreiros and Bicho2012). Furthermore, there was an intense presence of inland and coastal foraging, hunting, and processing of various types and sizes of prey, possible processing of edible plants, as well as the production of various lithic and bone tools, ornaments and art including abundant shell beads (Bicho and Haws Reference Bicho and Haws2008; Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013; Manne Reference Manne2014; Manne et al. Reference Manne, Cascalheira, Évora, Marreiros and Bicho2012; Marreiros et al. Reference Marreiros, Bicho, Gibaja, Pereira and Cascalheira2015; Pereira et al. Reference Pereira, Bicho, Cascalheira, Infantini, Marreiros, Paixão and Terradas2016; Tátá et al. Reference Tátá, Cascalheira, Marreiros, Pereira and Bicho2014). The presence of several mollusk species spans the different levels of the site proving the continued use and importance of mollusk shells as a resource throughout the stratigraphic sequence and allowing us to select and pretreat samples of different ages for comparison. Vale Boi has been excavated in three main areas—the Rockshelter, Slope and Terrace areas. Out of these three areas, the Terrace has the longest and most complete archeological sequence (Cascalheira et al. Reference Cascalheira, Bicho, Marreiros, Pereira, Évora, Cortés, Gibaja Bao, Manne, Regala and Gonçalves2012; Manne et al. Reference Manne, Cascalheira, Évora, Marreiros and Bicho2012; Marreiros et al. Reference Marreiros, Bicho, Gibaja, Pereira and Cascalheira2015). In previous studies, numerous 14C dates were available from all areas of the site, including dates on mollusk shells from the Terrace area (Table 1). However, there were some problems with the dates in terms of agreement with the stratigraphic sequence that need further investigation (Cascalheira et al. Reference Cascalheira, Bicho, Marreiros, Pereira, Évora, Cortés, Gibaja Bao, Manne, Regala and Gonçalves2012). Access to previous dates allows us to compare any new experimental results, which might also help clarify the stratigraphic incoherencies.

Table 1. Previous dates on samples from the Terrace area of the Vale Boi site

Materials and methods

We performed analysis and 14C dating on a total of 10 archeological shell samples, collected from Layers 3–7 at the Terrace area of Vale Boi. Some of the samples were divided into several pieces to perform the different pretreatment methods. In addition to the shell samples, two bone samples from Layer 6 in the Terrace area of Vale Boi were dated.

The bone samples were pretreated following the standard acid-base-acid method followed by ultrafiltration (Talamo et al. Reference Talamo, Fewlass, Maria and Jaouen2021; Talamo and Richards Reference Talamo and Richards2011) at the Department of Human Evolution at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (Leipzig, Germany). The Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) dates were obtained at the at the Klaus-Tschira AMS laboratory of the Curt-Engelhom-Centre for Archaeometry (CEZA; Mannheim, Germany).

All selected shell samples were given the unique identifying BRAVHO (Bologna Radiocarbon Laboratory Devoted to Human Evolution) lab number (BRA n°) and their stratigraphic position is shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1. The samples used in this study shown as red dots in their sampling positions within each archeological layer in the Terrace area of the Vale Boi site.

Shell pretreatment methods

Here, we introduce two methods aiming to extract the intracellular organic matrix of the shell and compare them to the two previously mentioned methods from literature (Dee et al. Reference Dee, Palstra, Aerts-Bijma, Bleeker, de Bruijn, Ghebru, Jansen, Kuitems, Paul, Richie and Spriensma2019; Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a; Russo et al. Reference Russo, Tripp, Douka and Higham2010). These four methods are summarized in Figure 2 as Methods A, B, C and D. Method A was based on a protocol routinely used in organic matrix extraction from modern coral and mollusk samples (Falini et al. Reference Falini, Reggi, Fermani, Sparla, Goffredo, Dubinsky, Levi, Dauphin and Cuif2013; Reggi et al. Reference Reggi, Fermani, Landi, Sparla, Caroselli, Gizzi, Dubinsky, Levy, Cuif, Dauphin and Goffredo2014). The advantage of this method is the use of a dialysis membrane, which allows to extract both the soluble and the insoluble organic matrix from the shell and minimizes the loss of organic material. Method B is quite similar, following mostly the same steps, although it does not include the use of a dialysis membrane. It was developed based on the routine collagen extraction protocol used in the BRAVHO 14C laboratory (Talamo et al. Reference Talamo, Fewlass, Maria and Jaouen2021; Talamo and Richards Reference Talamo and Richards2011). Method C corresponds to the CarDS protocol (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a; Russo et al. Reference Russo, Tripp, Douka and Higham2010) and Method D to the standard acid etching pretreatment used in most laboratories across the world (Dee et al. Reference Dee, Palstra, Aerts-Bijma, Bleeker, de Bruijn, Ghebru, Jansen, Kuitems, Paul, Richie and Spriensma2019). Before applying these methods to archeological specimens, they were tested on modern specimens. These tests, as well as further clarifications on the protocols used are presented in the Supplementary information file (SI). Comparing the 14C dates obtained from all four methods we could determine the best method to routinely apply on mollusk shells, which would exclude pretreatment as an issue when considering the use of shells for radiocarbon dating. This will be one step towards achieving more reliable results and helping obtain trustworthy chronologies for sites where shells are the only available material for dating.

Figure 2. Summary and comparison of the four methods tested, with red crosses for steps not performed.

Method A— Organic matrix extraction using a dialysis process: The shell samples were first cleaned with a mechanical drill to remove any sediment adhered to the shell surface, they were further cleaned by leaving them in a 5 vol.% sodium hypochlorite solution overnight to remove external organic matter, as it can be contaminating (Penkman et al. Reference Penkman, Kaufman, Maddy and Collins2008). Subsequently, the shells were rinsed in MilliQ water several times to wash off the sodium hypochlorite and any loose debris and left to air-dry before hand-crushing them to powder in an agate mortar. Then the crushed shells were further crushed in an automatic mill to obtain a finer powder, which was sieved with a 150 µm mesh stainless steel sieve. An aliquot of 2.5 g of each sample was put into a labelled glass tube and once again left in 5 vol.% sodium hypochlorite solution overnight for a thorough removal of non-intracrystalline organic material. It was then rinsed three times with MilliQ water and oven-dried for two days at 60°C. The powder was then transferred into SpectraPor 3 regenerated cellulose membranes for dialysis (MWCO = 3.5 kDa, flat width 45 mm, no glycerol humectant) and dispersed with 5 mL of deionized water. The sealed membranes were then put into 1 L of a 0.1 M CH3COOH solution under stirring. The solution was changed every five days until the samples were decalcified, subsequently it was replaced by MilliQ water to reach a pH value of around 6. The obtained dispersion containing organic matter was centrifuged at 3500 rpm (2301 × g) for 5 min to separate the soluble (liquid) and insoluble (solid) fractions, which were then lyophilized and weighed.

Method B— Organic matrix extraction (as for collagen extraction): After an initial mechanical cleaning of the shell surface, the samples were ground and sieved as for Method A. The powder was then inserted into labelled test tubes with a defined volume of a 0.5 M HCl solution. The solution was periodically changed until the powder stopped producing effervescence. Then, the samples were rinsed in MilliQ water three times before proceeding with another 15 min HCl (0.5 M) step followed by other three rinses. Then the samples were put in a pH 3 (0.001 M) HCl solution in a heater block at 70°C overnight. After letting them cool down, each sample was filtered using an Elkey labs Eeze filter, to tentatively separate the soluble and insoluble fractions and transferred into glass vials to be frozen and lyophilized. Alternatively, centrifugation can also be used to separate the two fractions, as described for Method A. However, as opposed to Method A, the soluble fraction is mostly lost during pretreatment in this case as it is not protected by the dialysis membrane. This method was based on (Talamo et al. Reference Talamo, Fewlass, Maria and Jaouen2021), with modifications to account for the different material types.

Method C— Carbonate Density Separation (CarDS): After the initial mechanical cleaning steps, the shells were soaked in a 50% NaOH solution overnight to remove the external organic protein fraction. The samples were then ground and sieved as for the previous methods. An X–ray Diffraction (XRD) analysis was performed on the powder to identify the proportions of aragonite and calcite before proceeding with the separation protocol. A portion of 100–800 mg of powder was then inserted into a 10 mL test tube where 4 mL of 99% bromoform solution and 250–350 µL of toluene were added. The mixture was then centrifuged for 20 min at 3500 rpm to separate the two polymorphs. The supernatant (presumable calcite) fraction was carefully pipetted into another glass tube, and both fractions were washed in dichloromethane and deionized water before freezing and lyophilization. This method was based on previous work by different authors (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a; Russo et al. Reference Russo, Tripp, Douka and Higham2010).

Method D— Acid etching: This pretreatment consisted of mechanical surface cleaning followed by an acid etching of the shell surface in HCl (4%) to remove the outermost layer. For shells used in these experiments, the etching lasted from 3 to 5 minutes. The shells were then ground and sieved as for the other methods. This method followed the protocol described in Dee et al. (Reference Dee, Palstra, Aerts-Bijma, Bleeker, de Bruijn, Ghebru, Jansen, Kuitems, Paul, Richie and Spriensma2019).

The four methods were applied to specimens from the Terrace area of the archeological site of Vale Boi. The selected samples in this context were Crassostrea sp. and Pecten sp., as these were the only two species present in different archeological layers with enough material to be used for four different pretreatment methods. These specimens were selected based on their weight to perform all methods on the same specimen when possible. In case enough material from the same specimen was not available, we selected a specimen from the same layer and same species to be able to compare the resulting 14C dates.

X-ray diffraction analyses

X-ray powder Diffraction (XRD) was performed using a PANalytical X-ray Diffractometer at the Department of Chemistry “Giacomo Ciamician” of the University of Bologna. The raw XRD pattern files were processed using the Profex 4.3.2a software (Döbelin and Kleeberg Reference Döbelin and Kleeberg2015) to determine the phases present in the powders (i.e., presence of aragonite/calcite) and their relative quantity. All the details on the analysis and resulting XRD patterns on modern and archeological shells are included in the SI.

Graphitization and CO 2 AMS dates

All shell samples were sent to the ETH laboratory in Zurich, Switzerland for AMS dating in the ETH MICADAS (Mini Radiocarbon Dating System (Wacker et al. Reference Wacker, Bonani, Friedrich, Hajdas, Kromer, NÏmec, Ruff, Suter, Synal and Vockenhuber2010a). Samples with a low weight yield (<10 mg) from method A and B were measured with the gas ion source (Ruff et al. Reference Ruff, Wacker, Gäggeler, Suter, Synal and Szidat2007). The organic samples were combusted with an EA (Ruff et al. Reference Ruff, Fahrni, Gäggeler, Hajdas, Suter, Synal, Szidat and Wacker2010). The resulting CO2 was isolated with a versatile gas interface (Wacker et al. Reference Wacker, Fahrni, Hajdas, Molnar, Synal, Szidat and Zhang2013), from where it was introduced into the gas ion source of the MICADAS (Fahrni et al. Reference Fahrni, Wacker, Synal and Szidat2013) for radiocarbon analysis as a standard procedure. The organic matter extracted with methods A and B, which had a sufficient weight yield (>10mg), was processed as other organic samples (i.e., collagen and cellulose), it was graphitized at the BRAVHO laboratory of the University of Bologna, using the coupled EA-AGE III graphitization system (Wacker et al. Reference Wacker, Němec and Bourquin2010b) and pressed into AMS targets as described by Tassoni et al. (Reference Tassoni, Kromer, Friedrich, Wacker, Cattani, Friedrich, Paleček, Pelloni, Peng and Thomas2023). During processing, all samples were accompanied by weight-matched standards and blanks (Oxalic and phthalic acid). To convert CO2 to graphite in the AGE graphitization system, we used iron as catalyst (Němec et al. Reference Němec, Wacker and Gäggeler2010; Wacker et al. Reference Wacker, Němec and Bourquin2010b), which results in a mixture of graphite and iron (more iron than graphite) in the target. In the ion source of the AMS, a cesium beam is directed to the target creating carbon ions, and this process is diluted by the iron present in the target. The more iron is present, the lower the ion yield and thus the current will be. In the AGE, graphitization requires at least 3 mg of Fe for 1 mg of C. If the sample contains less than 1mg of C, the ratio of Fe:C will increase, so the current will decrease. Thus, we performed graphitization tests on the samples to define the carbon content of the material. The test revealed that the carbon content was very low (1–5% C). Therefore, for four of the samples of insoluble organic matter, with lower carbon yields (BRA 4957 – Method A, BRA 4952 – Method B, BRA 4938 – Method B and BRA 4930 – Method A), only 2 mg of Fe was used during graphitization to allow for sufficient AMS ion current. Furthermore, samples of oxalic acid were graphitized with all the shell samples with the according iron amounts, as standards. Finally, for the carbonate fractions treated with Methods C and D the samples were sent directly to the ETH in gas chromatography (GC) vials. Phosphoric acid was used to release CO2 from the carbonates, subsequently following the aforementioned standard procedure used by ETH. For all samples dated, phthalic acid blanks graphitized in the BRAVHO laboratory were included to correct the resulting ages.

Pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS)

Analytical pyrolysis is a powerful technique capable of providing chemical information about organic matter at a molecular level. The use of Py-GC-MS to characterize the chemical composition of natural organic matter has been reported in studies related to differences in 14C ages (Ferro-Vázquez et al. Reference Ferro-Vázquez, Kaal, Arévalo and Boado2019). Furthermore, Py-GC-MS was used to identify possible changes in the composition of fresh mussels (M. galloprovincialis) after exposure to cyanotoxins (Diez-Quijada et al. Reference Diez-Quijada, De Oliveira, Jos, Cameán, Aparicio-Ruiz, Vasconcelos, Campos, González-Vila and González-Pérez2020). Analytical pyrolysis has also been applied to the characterization of the intra-skeletal organic matrix in hard corals (Adamiano et al. Reference Adamiano, Goffredo, Dubinsky, Levy, Fermani, Fabbri and Falini2014).

In this study, analyses by Py-GC-MS were performed to determine if the insoluble materials extracted with Methods A and B were consistent to the chemical characteristics of the organic matrix of the shell and checking for the occurrence of any external material in the samples. Py-GC-MS analysis was performed using an EGA/PY-3030D micro-furnace pyrolyser (Frontier Laboratories Ltd., Japan) coupled with a 7890 Agilent HP gas chromatograph (GC) connected to a 5977 Agilent HP quadrupole mass spectrometer (MS) (Agilent Technologies, USA). A small crucible capsule containing weighed shell sample (2–4 mg) was introduced into the furnace and then pyrolyzed at 600°C for 100 s using helium as carrier gas (1 mL min–1) and an interface temperature of 280°C. The evolved gases were then directly injected into the GC-MS for analysis. The GC injector was operated in split mode with a 10:1 ratio at 280°C. Pyrolysis products were separated by a HP-5MS fused silica capillary column (stationary phase poly[5% diphenyl/95% dimethyl]siloxane, 30 m × 0.25 mm i.d., 0.25 μm film thickness, Agilent Technologies, USA) with the following temperature program: 50°C to 300°C at 10°C min–1, then hold for 10 min at 300°C, using helium as carrier gas (1 mL min–1). The MS was operated in EI positive mode (70eV, scanning 45–500 m/z) with transfer line temperature 250°C, ion source temperature 230°C and quadrupole temperature 150°C. Tentative identification of the pyrolysis products was performed by comparison with MS library and published studies.

Results

In terms of complexity, time and equipment required for performing the methods, the simplest and most rapid of the methods performed was Method D. Methods A and B required the longest time to complete, however the procedures were relatively simple. Method C on the other hand, was the most complicated to perform successfully and it required working with bromoform and toluene, both highly hazardous substances.

Weight and carbon yields

The final weight of all archeological samples is shown in Table 2. All four methods lead to the reduction of the initial sample weight, resulting in 0.1 wt.% to 81.3 wt.% of the initial sample weight (Table 2). Methods A and B caused the most substantial loss of material, as only the organic matter was extracted, resulting in 0.1 wt.% to 2.0 wt.% of the initial shell weight. The mean values of 0.5 wt.% for Method A and 0.7 wt.% for Method B align with the expected organic matter content in mollusk shells of 0.01–5% of the shell weight (Berger et al. Reference Berger, Horney and Libby1964; Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis and Cherkinsky2018; Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis, Cherkinsky, Ritchison, Lulewicz and Thompson2019; Marin et al. Reference Marin, Le Roy and Marie2012), considering an additional loss of material during the pretreatment steps. Furthermore, the low yields for archeological shells could be expected due to degradation, even though the organic matrix in the shell is considered to remain well preserved (Berger et al. Reference Berger, Horney and Libby1964). The difference in yield between the two methods could be due to a better dissolution in Method A of the carbonate fraction. A higher proportion of soluble organic matter is maintained in the sample due to the use of the dialysis technique as opposed to direct dissolution used in Method B, which causes most of the soluble fraction to be lost during pretreatment. For methods C and D, the carbonate fraction is used, thus resulting in a higher weight yield after pretreatment (from 12.2 wt.% to 81.3 wt.% of the initial weight). The mean weight yield for Method C was 66.3 wt.%, while for Method D the mean was 32.2 wt.%. In Method C, the material is lost mostly due to the various pretreatment steps, as this method doesn’t imply the use of acid to dissolve the shell. This explains the yield difference between Methods C and D since the latter uses an acid to dissolve the outer portion of the shell. As the authors of Method C (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a) also stated, the loss of material using acid etching usually varies from 30 to 80% of the initial weight. See the weight yield comparison with modern specimens in the SI (Section 3). The carbon yield of all pretreated samples is shown in Table 2. Samples with weight yields under 10 mg, which were not graphitized, had very low carbon yields (2–217 µg of carbon). Samples with less than 20 µg of carbon were considered unreliable and excluded from the study. Graphitized samples yielded 191–755 µg of carbon, with all but two samples providing what is considered as sufficient carbon for routine AMS dating (500 µg; Butkus et al. Reference Butkus, Šapolaitė, Garbarienė, Garbaras, Bučinskas, Pabedinskas, Remeikis and Ežerinskis2022). Carbonate samples had the highest carbon yields (979–999 µg), which are values considered sufficient to obtain reliable radiocarbon determinations.

Table 2. Information on the Archeological samples used in the experiments. The end weight and radiocarbon age are shown as the Soluble/Insoluble fraction for Methods A and B, as Aragonite/calcite for Method C, and for Method D as the whole carbonate fraction

XRD analysis

For Methods A and B, the XRD analysis was performed after pretreatment on both the soluble and insoluble fractions. The results obtained were in line with the expectations, as the soluble organic matrix fraction did not contain any carbonates, while the insoluble one had traces of carbonates in some cases where the dissolution was not complete, as well as traces of quartz in some other cases (Figure S7, Section 4 in the SI). Presumably, the traces of quartz derive from contamination in the seashells, however since there is no carbon in quartz this should not affect the radiocarbon age.

All the samples used for Method C were mostly calcite with only a small fraction of aragonite (Table 3 and S3, Figures S10–S13, Section 4 in the SI). In case of both Pecten sp. and Crassostrea sp., this was expected, as they are primarily calcite (Carriker and Palmer Reference Carriker and Palmer1979; Stenzel Reference Stenzel1963; Turekian and Armstrong Reference Turekian and Armstrong1960), except for muscle binding areas which were found to consist of aragonite in various species of oysters (Carriker and Palmer Reference Carriker and Palmer1979). The only high aragonite sample was BRA 4952 (>90% aragonite; Table 3). All other samples were over 99% calcite, thus we attempted a single separation to separate high Mg calcite (HMC, higher density, >4% MgCO3) from low Mg calcite (LMC, lower density, <4% MgCO3), as stated possible by the authors of the method (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a). HMC and aragonite are considered the metastable polymorphs, which under the influence of different factors (such as the pH and Mg:Ca ratio values, various kinetic, biological and hydrographic factors) are expected to recrystallize into the more stable LMC after the death of the organism (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a) and references therein. After pretreatment, sample BRA 4952 resulted in a slightly higher aragonite proportion (Table 3), while the calcite samples in some cases showed traces of aragonite that were previously not detected. Furthermore, no differences in average Mg content were detected in the calcite samples before and after separation, given the similar lattice parameters in the XRD patterns (Figure 3 and S10–S13, Section 4 in the SI). This method would be more effective in cases with a high proportion of both polymorphs and high variations in Mg content in the shell. Many marine organisms incorporate both HMC and LMC into their skeletons to increase its resistance and hardness (Bianco-Stein et al. Reference Bianco-Stein, Polishchuk, Lang, Portal, Dejoie, Katsman and Pokroy2022; Ma et al. Reference Ma, Cohen, Addadi and Weiner2008, Reference Ma, Aichmayer, Paris, Fratzl, Meibom, Metzler, Politi, Addadi, Gilbert and Weiner2009; Polishchuk et al. Reference Polishchuk, Bracha, Bloch, Levy, Kozachkevich, Etinger-Geller, Kauffmann, Burghammer, Giacobbe, Villanova and Hendler2017). Therefore, the presence of these two calcite polymorphs may not indicate diagenetic recrystallization.

Table 3. Percentages of calcite and aragonite before and after the application of Method C to archeological shells. Whole—percentages before separation; Aragonite/calcite—the two resulting fractions which presumably are either aragonite or calcite. The two columns showing the weight percentage of calcite/aragonite are the results of XRD pattern analysis, showing actual percentages obtained in the separated fractions

Figure 3. XRD patterns of the “calcite” (left) and “aragonite” (right) fractions after separation using Method C. The samples are positioned along the vertical axis to differentiate them from one another.

Archeological samples treated with Method D showed similar proportions of calcite and aragonite before and after applying the protocol. A slight decrease in aragonite percentage could have been expected given the preferential dissolution of aragonite during the acid etching of shells (Vita-Finzi and Roberts Reference Vita-Finzi and Roberts1984). Interestingly, archeological sample BRA 4952 contained a higher amount of aragonite in the portion pretreated with Method D compared to the portion pretreated with Method C.

Furthermore, the results obtained from the XRD analysis revealed little to no change in the mineral phase composition in the carbonate samples pretreated for this study, which could indicate that the samples most likely have not been subjected to heavy recrystallization. However, to truly assess the preservation state of the shells, a simple polymorph determination is not enough, and should be combined with other tests such as microscopic examination of the crystalline structure, or the examination of the organic matter preservation (Guzmán et al. Reference Guzmán, Dauphin, Cuif, Denis and Ortlieb2009; Perrin Reference Perrin2004; Toffolo Reference Toffolo2021). Some of the differences in the XRD results could also be explained by differences in original polymorph proportions which can vary due to shell ontogeny and thickness, as well as due to the climatic and environmental conditions in which the mollusks secreted their exoskeletons. Moreover, the portions analyzed for each method were different fragments taken from the same shells, which may contain variable proportions of the two polymorphs. To avoid this in future experiments, the shells could be ground to powder whole and only then separated for pretreatment with the different methods. Alternatively, Feigl’s solution could be applied to the samples to determine the presence of calcite and aragonite prior to analysis. This is a common practice useful to determine areas of the shell to select for radiocarbon dating, and it allows for the identification of the two polymorphs prior to the use of any type of wet chemical pretreatment (Checa et al. Reference Checa, Jiménez-López, Rodríguez-Navarro and Machado2007; Gray and Smith Reference Gray and Smith2004; Schöne et al. Reference Schöne, Schmitt and Maus2017). However, in this study it was important to have all the material available for pretreatment in order to perform multiple pretreatment methods on the same sample. Therefore, this type of selection was not performed for this study.

Radiocarbon AMS dates

The radiocarbon ages of all the samples are shown in Table 2. All results are reported as uncalibrated dates and expressed in BP (years before 1950). Results from Method A and B were expected to overlap and mostly did so in Layers 3 and 4, while in Layers 5, 6 and 7 Method B resulted in even younger ages compared to Method A. In Layer 3 the carbonate fractions from Methods C and D overlap with the dates on the organic fraction from both Method A and B. However, for all the remaining layers, the carbonate fractions resulted in much older ages.

Method A— The shells treated with Method A gave ages ranging from 15,617 ± 153 to 3,309 ± 72 BP. Both the insoluble and soluble fractions from Method A gave very young dates with no clear trend. Only three of the extracted soluble fractions resulted in enough material to obtain reliable radiocarbon measurements. In two cases, for samples BRA 4930 and BRA 4942, the soluble fraction was significantly younger than the insoluble fraction extracted from the same shell. On the other hand, the soluble fraction from sample BRA 4952 resulted significantly older than the insoluble fraction from the same shell.

Method B— Method B gave similar results to those from Method A, giving even younger ages ranging from 8,609 ± 23 to 858 ± 83 BP. This method resulted only in insoluble fractions, with one exception, as the soluble fractions were mostly lost during pretreatment. The only sample resulting in enough soluble organic matrix to be dated was BRA 4956 from Layer 7, and it was an outlier with an extremely young age of 858±83 BP.

Method C— The radiocarbon ages resulting from shells treated with Method C ranged from 27,374 ± 121 to 4,596 ± 23 BP. The aragonite fractions were consistently older compared to the calcite fractions resulting from the same shell even though the differences were not substantial in two out of three cases resulting in 226- and 207-years difference in Layers 5 and 7, BRA 4946 and BRA 4957 respectively. The only major difference between the calcite and aragonite fractions was 2836 years in sample BRA 4943 from Layer 4.

Method D —Method D resulted in an age range from 33,416 ± 240 to 5,522 ± 24 BP. The age obtained for sample BRA 4931 from Layer 3 is similar to the results for this Layer obtained by the other methods. In Layer 4, the age obtained for sample BRA 4936 was close to the age obtained from Method C for the calcite fraction of sample BRA 4943 from the same Layer, resulting significantly younger than the aragonite fraction from the same shell. However, in this case it is important to underline that Methods C and D were performed on two different samples. Therefore, a direct comparison might not be reliable. The ages obtained for shells from Layers 5, 6 and 7 were older than those resulting from Method C both from aragonite and calcite fractions.

Comparison with previous results— Based on previous results on charcoal samples (Tátá et al. Reference Tátá, Cascalheira, Marreiros, Pereira and Bicho2014) the expected 14C age for samples from Layer 3 was ∼8660 to ∼8880 BP (Table 1). However, the shells used in this study yielded younger ages across all four methods, even though a direct comparison of different materials and species can cause errors in interpretation. Although ages obtained with Method C and D for Layer 4 matched the expected range for Layer 5 (∼20,300–25,400 BP, Table 1), they were older than ages obtained by the same methods for Layer 5 (∼19–20,000 BP). For Layer 5, Methods A and B produced ages significantly younger than expected (6781 ± 87 and 5054 ± 77 BP, respectively for the same sample), the sample pretreated with Method D aligned with previous dates, while results from Method C were slightly younger. Layer 6 exhibited high variability, with previous 14C results ranging from ∼26,000 to ∼41,000 BP (Table 1). The carbonate fractions from the same sample collected in this layer resulted in ages of 27,374 ± 121 BP for Method C, and 33,416±240 BP for Method D. The two dates on bones from Layer 6 of the Terrace area resulted in two considerably different dates of 27,600 ± 140 for sample MAMS-19366 and 20,260 ± 80 BP for sample MAMS-19367. Layer 6 aragonite fraction mostly agreed with previous shell results, though dates varied significantly in this layer. For Layer 7, the expected 14C age range was ∼24,300–27,100 BP (Table 1). The sample from this layer pretreated with Method D matched this range (∼25,000 BP), while Method C resulted in younger ages for the same sample (∼21,000 BP). In Layers 6 and 7, Method D produced dates ∼5000 years older than Method C’s for the same shells, though some previous shell dates were even older (Table 1). When considering only dates obtained on Pecten sp. for layers 5–7, our dates from Method C are considerably younger, with Method D showing closer, yet still younger ages.

Pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS)

In this study, only the insoluble fractions of the extracted organic matrix were analyzed as the soluble fractions were insufficient to perform Py-GC-MS. The pyrograms of the archaeological samples (Figure 4) were characterized by a variety of pyrolysis products that included (1) aliphatic hydrocarbons, mainly n-alkanes from n-decane to n-tetratiacontane, (2) aromatic hydrocarbons principally diphenyl, monocyclic (from benzene to C4-benzenes) and polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs, indenes, naphthalenes, phenanthrene and alkylated forms), (3) nitrogen-containing compounds (pyrroles, pyridines, aromatic and long chain aliphatic nitriles), (4) aliphatic (fatty acids, palmitic and oleic acids) and aromatic oxygenated compounds (furaldehydes, phenols, benzofurans).

Figure 4. MS-pyrograms from Py-GC-MS of the insoluble fraction of archaeological samples. The molecular structures were reported for some of the most intense peaks. CS2: carbon disulphide; PA: palmitic acid; SA: stearic acid; S: squalene; (o): alkenes; (▪): alkanes.

Discussion

Weight and carbon yields

The weight yields obtained for Methods A and B were in line with the expectations based on literature and previous results (Berger et al. Reference Berger, Horney and Libby1964; Hadden et al. Reference Hadden, Loftis and Cherkinsky2018, Reference Hadden, Loftis, Cherkinsky, Ritchison, Lulewicz and Thompson2019; Marin et al. Reference Marin, Le Roy and Marie2012). It is important to acknowledge the large amount of material needed to perform Methods A and B compared to Methods C and D, considering both the low weight and carbon yields. This makes it difficult to choose Method A or B instead of Method C or D, since the amount of material available for pretreatment can often be scarce. Furthermore, having a lower yield makes the extracted material more susceptible to contamination, the effect of which, if present, will be much greater than in a higher yield sample. For example, the same quantity of modern carbon introduced in a sample of 1mg would have a much more significant effect on the radiocarbon age than in a sample of 100 mg. In previous work it was demonstrated that even samples with low carbon yields (<100 µg C) resulted in reliable radiocarbon dates when using the direct CO2 measurement method, used for the organic matter samples in this study with less than 10 mg of material (Fewlass et al. Reference Fewlass, Talamo, Tuna, Fagault, Kromer, Hoffmann, Pangrazzi, Hublin and Bard2017; Fewlass et al. Reference Fewlass, Tuna, Fagault, Hublin, Kromer, Bard and Talamo2019). AMS dates obtained from samples which resulted in carbon content below 20 µg were not considered reliable and were excluded from this study. Furthermore, for sample graphitization, a carbon content of 500 µg is considered sufficient for routine AMS dating (Butkus et al. Reference Butkus, Šapolaitė, Garbarienė, Garbaras, Bučinskas, Pabedinskas, Remeikis and Ežerinskis2022). Samples with carbon content from 50–300 µg of carbon were successfully graphitized using the AGE III graphitization system with the routine method (Solís et al. Reference Solís, Chávez, Ortiz, Andrade, Ortíz, Szidat and Wacker2015), and a dilution method was also developed to bring the carbon content values up to 500 µg for aerosol measurements (Butkus et al. Reference Butkus, Šapolaitė, Garbarienė, Garbaras, Bučinskas, Pabedinskas, Remeikis and Ežerinskis2022). In this study, the carbon content of graphitized samples was below the 500 µg threshold only in case of two samples which had 437 and 191 µg of carbon. Therefore, the carbon yield of the samples in this study, although very low in some cases, was sufficient for reliable AMS measurements to be performed. However, the low carbon yield, as previously mentioned, could render the effect of any present contamination in the samples much more pronounced.

Evaluation of diagenesis and contamination

The soluble fractions were expected to give the most reliable date, as this fraction was isolated from external influences and did not contain carbonate. However, the soluble fractions from Method A resulted younger than the insoluble fractions in most cases and the only soluble fraction resulting from Method B was an outlier and extremely young for an early Gravettian layer (Figure 5) possibly indicating that the soluble fraction is more susceptible to modern contamination. However, this could also be due to the very small amount of the soluble fraction and the low carbon content that was extracted, which would be more affected by any potential contamination. Furthermore, the results obtained for both Method A and Method B are extremely young considering previous dates, and dates from this study obtained using the carbonate fraction. The lack of overlap between the carbonate fractions with the organic matrix in all layers except Layer 3 could be due to the use of a different species, since for Layer 3 Crassostrea sp. was used and for all the other layers Pecten sp. was used. The radiocarbon age of mollusk shells can be influenced by a variety of factors, including habitat (Lindauer et al. Reference Lindauer, Hadden, Macario and Guilderson2021), mineralogy (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Higham and Hedges2010b) and feeding ecology (England et al. Reference England, Dyke, Coulthard, McNeely and Aitken2013). The two species used in this study are both filter feeders (Santhanam Reference Santhanam2018a). However, Crassostrea sp. is an intertidal to subtidal species, while Pecten sp. is a subtidal species, which might have an influence on the radiocarbon content of the samples. In previous studies, some of the Pecten sp. samples collected were heavily abraded and since they live at depths of 10–110 m, they were almost certainly collected from the beach, thus possibly giving older ages than the age of their use at the site (Manne et al. Reference Manne, Cascalheira, Évora, Marreiros and Bicho2012).

Figure 5. A graph showing the radiocarbon age (X-axis) resulting from the four different methods applied on shells with different shapes indicating different shell samples used (Layer 3: BRA 4930 triangle; BRA 4931 circle; Layer 4: BRA 4942 diamond; BRA 4938 inverted triangle; BRA 4936 triangle; BRA 4943 circle; Layer 5: BRA 4946 circle; Layer 6: BRA 4952 circle; Layer 7: BRA 4956 triangle; BRA 4957 circle) and previous results from charcoal, bones and shells (squares) from five different archaeological layers (Y-axis). The error bars (±1σ) are shown within the symbols for most samples, given the large scale of the graph, and the tightness of the error range.

The differences between the dates on Pecten sp. from previous studies compared to the results presented here could be partly explained by “shelf life” in beach deposits, as well as variable preservation and taphonomy. However, this does not explain the differences among methods applied to the same shell (Figure 5). For Layers 5 and 7 the differences in age between aragonite and calcite, separated with Method C, were not substantial, which was expected since both fractions contained similar percentages of calcite and aragonite. Given the differences in age between the calcite and aragonite fractions in Layer 4, it is possible that there was some diagenetic alteration of the calcium carbonate. This could have occurred with potential incorporation of exogenous carbon into the sample and no change in the crystalline structure given the prevalence of one of the two polymorphs in all samples. Furthermore, intrashell variation in diagenetic effects was hypothesized in a previous study after the application of both XRD and Scanning electron microscopy which did not always show consistent results (Barton Reference Barton2012). Additionally, some of the samples which were determined as well-preserved gave radiocarbon determinations which despite that were statistical outliers (Barton Reference Barton2012). This confirms the hypothesis that diagenetic effects cannot always be detected merely by examining the carbonate polymorphs present in the sample. Therefore, it is necessary to perform multiple lines of analysis to confirm the preservation state of shell samples prior to radiocarbon dating.

Comparison among methods and with expected ages

The ages obtained from Methods A and B were considerably younger than the expected ages for the archeological Layers 3–7 in the Terrace area of the Vale Boi site (Figure 5). To properly compare the results of the four pretreatment methods, we will focus on the only two samples on which all four methods were performed. Samples BRA 4946 and 4952 show that the age obtained using the organic matrix presents a shift towards younger ages by over ten to fifteen thousand years. A similar discrepancy is observed in sample BRA 4957 pretreated with three of the methods. Therefore, despite the theoretical potential the organic matrix has, the results of this experiment demonstrate that it is challenging to obtain reliable results using this fraction. Given the consistency of the results obtained for both methods, the systematic error in dates is likely related to the process of organic matrix extraction irrespective of the specific methods used, or possible contamination during pretreatment. Considering the ages of the samples pretreated with Methods A and B, in case modern contamination was present, half or more of each sample would have to be modern to obtain such results. Given the low weight yield of the organic matrix extracted and its low carbon content, even a small amount of modern contamination could have affected the results in such a way. Since the ages obtained from Methods C and D resulted in much older ages for all layers except Layer 3, it is possible that the contamination is specific to the organic matrix fractions and possibly species specific. In further research, the effect of the species used should be examined to determine if the organic matrix of different species from the same layers gives variable results, given the natural differences among species in terms of habitat, diet and even polymorph proportions. The overlap with the ages from the carbonate fractions in Layer 3 could also be explained by the smaller effect of modern contamination on younger samples (Talamo et al. Reference Talamo, Fewlass, Maria and Jaouen2021). However, given the effect certain habitats, diets and species-specific mineralogy on the radiocarbon ages obtained on mollusk shells, it should be common practice to use only a determined species for radiocarbon dating. Moreover, fungi and/or microorganisms may introduce younger contamination into the organic fractions of a sample during storage and preparation (Wohlfarth Reference Wohlfarth, Skog, Possnert and Holmquist1998). Furthermore, another way to introduce younger contamination after shell deposition is the development of inorganic intracrystalline carbonate cement within a shell structure (Douka et al. Reference Douka, Hedges and Higham2010a; Webb et al. Reference Webb, Price, Nothdurft, Deer and Rintoul2007). This fraction would be removed in Methods A and B, together with the rest of the carbonate fraction. Nonetheless, secondary carbonate precipitates can be formed by microorganisms which also leave fatty acid signatures in the intracrystalline structure of the shells (Busschers et al. Reference Busschers, Wesselingh, Kars, Versluijs-Helder, Wallinga, Bosch, Timmner, Nierop, Meijer and Bunnik2014). This type of non-carbonate contamination would be maintained in the sample after pretreatment. Given the differences in age between the organic matrix and the carbonate fractions from our shells, microbially-induced recrystallization could explain these results. This type of recrystallization could have occurred with no change in the polymorphic state of the carbonates as seen in the XRD results for the samples used in this study. Even though the intracrystalline organic matrix has been shown to be a closed system (Penkman et al. Reference Penkman, Kaufman, Maddy and Collins2008), what this entails in terms of radiocarbon analysis is yet to be understood. Since the carbonate fractions were unaffected, or significantly less affected by the contamination, this would mean that the organic matrix might be more susceptible to it. However, at the present time and with such a small amount of material, it is impossible to consider the organic matrix extraction a feasible method for dating archeological mollusk shells.

It is important to note that the shell dates were not corrected for the marine reservoir effect, thus a direct comparison with bone dates from Layer 6, and among the different species will only be reliable once the correction of the marine reservoir effect is applied. Nonetheless, based on the 14C ages, all the results in Layer 6 are inconsistent and the differences are larger than this correction (Figure 5). Previous results from Layer 6 indicated two sets of human occupation around 3000 years apart from one another (Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013), which could correspond to the dates we obtained. Furthermore, the bone pretreatment method is well-established, proven to eliminate exogenous contaminant carbon from the sample (Talamo et al. Reference Talamo, Fewlass, Maria and Jaouen2021). Thus, the differences in Layer 6 might instead be due to vertical movement and mixing within and between the layers, which were also identified in previous work (Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013). Vertical movement of samples between layers could also explain why we obtained younger ages for Layer 5 compared to Layer 4, and those from Layer 7, compared to Layer 6. However, it does not explain the difference between the dates obtained for Layer 6 from the same shell (BRA 4952, Figure 5). Furthermore, when considering only the carbonates from the samples BRA 4946 and 4952 pretreated with all four methods, and sample BRA 4957 pretreated with three of the methods, Method D is constantly showing older ages compared to Method C. This is also observed in BRA 4931 which was pretreated both with Method C and D. The age differences range from around a thousand years in BRA 4946 to around six thousand years in BRA 4952. The dates obtained with Method D overlap better with previous results. However, the samples from literature were also pretreated using acid etching, similarly to Method D. Based on this data alone, it is difficult to determine with certainty which of these two methods is showing the correct ages. In previous work, heavy recrystallization was detected in some of the shell samples (Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013). Even though our XRD results do not show such differences in terms of aragonite to calcite transformations, there could have been some diagenetic alterations without a change in crystalline structure which were not detected. Analysis of the shell crystalline structure would help identify possible diagenetic alterations, which did not result in change in the carbonate polymorph to improve the sample selection in cases where shells are used to construct site chronologies. The pyrolysis products we obtained for the insoluble organic matrix of the archeological samples pretreated with Method A and B are normally detected upon Py-GC-MS of diagenetically degraded natural organic matter (Brown et al. Reference Brown, Chiavari, Ediger, Fabbri, Gaines, Galletti, Karayigit, Love, Snape, Sirkecioglu and Toprak2000). A similar suite of pyrolysis products was reported for the sedimentary matrix of samples of the Upper Palaeolithic sequence of Abri Pataud that were attributed to charred organic matter mixed to other organic materials (Braadbaart et al. Reference Braadbaart, Reidsma, Roebroeks, Chiotti, Slon, Meyer, Théry-Parisot, van Hoesel, Nierop, Kaal and van Os2020). We performed a comparison of the pyrolytic patterns obtained on archeological shells with patterns from modern samples (See SI, Section 4). This comparison evidenced changes indicative of degradative processes related to diagenesis (a more detailed discussion is available in the SI, Section 4). It is worth noting that the samples obtained from method A (BRA 4930, BRA 4942, BRA 4957) generated Py-GC-MS traces featured by a suite of peaks tentatively identified as sulphur-containing compounds. In particular, carbon disulphide, alkyl tiophenes, benzotiophenes and a broad peak at the central part of the chromatogram attributed to S8. The presence of tiophenes was typically encountered in the pyrograms of natural organic matter degraded under anoxic conditions (Çoban-Yıldız et al. Reference Çoban-Yıldız, Fabbri, Baravelli, Vassura, Yılmaz, Tuğrul and Eker-Develi2006). The samples used in this study could have spent a significant amount of time in this type of conditions in marine sediments, given the fact that they were most likely collected from the beach. However, tiophenes could be formed as artefacts during pyrolysis by the reaction of elemental sulfur with fatty acids (Saiz-Jimenez Reference Saiz-Jimenez1995). Besides, the presence of sulfur compounds was also observed in the pyrogram of the modern samples (See SI, Section 4) and the sample BRA 4930 treated with method A suggesting differences in the pyrolytic pattern caused by sample treatment. This would support the hypothesis that the extraction protocol might affect the obtained organic matrix.

All four methods gave ages inconsistent with the stratigraphical attribution of the samples and the expected age for the respective archeological layers given the previous results (Figure 5). Samples from Layer 6 gave the oldest ages for all four methods, and the samples from Layer 4 were consistently older than those from Layer 5, for all four methods. Most of the previous results on shells come from dates on Patella sp. which is a grazing species feeding on algae by scraping them off the rocky substrate (Santhanam Reference Santhanam2018b). This might cause age distortions by the introduction of older carbon from the limestone rocks present in the Vale Boi area (Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013; Tátá et al. Reference Tátá, Cascalheira, Marreiros, Pereira and Bicho2014). It is worth noting that the use of different mollusk species might cause large discrepancies in the results (For example, see England et al. Reference England, Dyke, Coulthard, McNeely and Aitken2013). On the one hand, due to the influence of variable diets, climatic and environmental conditions of each species which influences their initial biochemical composition, and on the other hand due to their different uses at the site. A previous study found differences among shell dates of up to 2000 years which they attributed mainly to heavy recrystallization, but also mentioned vertical sample movement as a potential issue (Bicho et al. Reference Bicho, Manne, Marreiros, Cascalheira, Pereira, Tátá, Évora, Gonçalves and Infantini2013). This underlines the need of securing the stratigraphical attribution of the samples and further studying the potential disturbances and bioturbation in the stratigraphical units of the site. Furthermore, it is necessary to perform experiments using more samples to evaluate differences among the results when using different species from the same layer in a secure stratigraphical context.

Conclusions

The extraction of the organic matrix of the shells in theory could be a potentially useful method for radiocarbon dating, given that the intracrystalline organic matrix of the shell is protected from the surrounding environment in a closed system. However, after the application, the weight and carbon yields were very low for both method A and B, and the resulting ages were significantly younger than those resulting from carbonate fractions of the same shell specimens. This means that further research is needed to explore ways to perform the organic matter extraction without risk of contamination. A potential way to decrease the effect of contamination is to obtain samples with a higher weight and, subsequently higher carbon yields. Moreover, it is important to take into consideration the large amount of material needed to perform the organic matrix extraction (Method A and B) compared to the amount needed for the carbonate pretreatment (Method C and D). Therefore, to be able to apply this approach to more archeological specimens, which are often extremely valuable, further investigation needs to be done. Method C is a useful method for aragonite and calcite separation in shells presenting both calcium carbonate polymorphs in significant amounts. However, in this study most of the samples consisted of one of the two polymorphs, and the traces of the other polymorph were difficult to remove. Therefore, this method did not have enough of an effect to justify the effort of performing the pretreatment. Furthermore, there could be diagenetic effects that occur without aragonite to calcite transformations, which would not be detected by XRD nor removed by Method C. As demonstrated by the pyrolysis results from samples pretreated with Methods A and B, degradation can occur without an apparent effect on the crystalline structure of the samples. Therefore, performing a more detailed analysis of the crystalline structure of shells before radiocarbon dating could reveal alterations that were not identified in this study and that might influence the resulting age estimates. Finally, Method D is the quickest and simplest method performed, and it gave results closer to the expected ages compared to the other methods, in most cases. When we consider sites where only shells are available for radiocarbon dating, it is crucial to carefully select the species and samples, as they must be in alignment with the method employed. These choices should be made in close collaboration between radiocarbon specialists and site archeologists as they can greatly affect the accuracy of the age determination and interpretation.

Overall, all the results were inconsistent both for shells and for the two bones analyzed in the Terrace area of Vale Boi in comparison with the previous results and with the archeological attribution. Given the complexities of the Vale Boi archeological site and the potential mixing in the stratigraphical sequence, it is likely that some of the inconsistencies in ages obtained from the different layers are due to factors not directly linked to dating shells. However, dates obtained from the same individuals using different methods showed significant differences, highlighting the importance of using efficient pretreatment protocols. The results of this study underline the difficulty of obtaining reliable radiocarbon dates on marine mollusk shells, and the need for additional method improvements for their pretreatment and contamination removal.

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2024.80

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by the European Research Council under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (grant agreement No. 803147 RESOLUTION, awarded to S. T.). This paper is part of the PhD of D. P., which is supported by the European Research Council under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (grant agreement No. 803147 RESOLUTION). J. C. is funded by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, contract reference DL57/2016/CP1361/CT0026. Special thanks go to all the staff in the BRAVHO laboratory, especially to Laura Tassoni, Silvia Cercatillo, and Dr. Dr. Bernd Kromer for their precious help and advice during this project. The University of Bologna, in particular the Department of Chemistry “Giacomo Ciamician” for the use of XRD and the Tecnopolo di Rimini for the Pyrolysis. We extend our sincere gratitude to the editors and anonymous reviewers for their careful and constructive feedback, which has significantly enhanced our manuscript.

Competing interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

References

Adamiano, A, Goffredo, S, Dubinsky, Z, Levy, O, Fermani, S, Fabbri, D and Falini, G (2014) Analytical pyrolysis-based study on intra-skeletal organic matrices from Mediterranean corals. Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 406(24), 60216033.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alves, EQ, Macario, K, Ascough, P and Bronk Ramsey, C (2018) The worldwide marine radiocarbon reservoir effect: Definitions, mechanisms, and prospects. Reviews of Geophysics 56(1), 278305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barthelat, F (2010) Nacre from mollusk shells: A model for high-performance structural materials. Bioinspiration & Biomimetics 5(3), 035001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barton, R (2012) Gibraltar Neanderthals in context. A report of the 1995-98 excavations at gorham’s and vanguard caves, Gibraltar.Google Scholar
Belfer-Cohen A and Goring-Morris N (2012) VI-The Earlier Upper Palaeolithic: A view from the Southern Levant. L’Aurignacien de La Grotte Yafteh et Son Contexte (Fouilles 2005-2008)/The Aurignacian of Yafteh Cave and Its Context (2005–2008 Excavations). Liège, 127–136.Google Scholar
Belmiro, J, Bicho, N, Haws, J and Cascalheira, J (2021) The Gravettian-Solutrean transition in westernmost Iberia: New data from the sites of Vale Boi and Lapa do Picareiro. Quaternary International 587, 1940.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, R, Horney, AG and Libby, WF (1964) Radiocarbon dating of bone and shell from their organic components. Science 144(3621), 9991001.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bianco-Stein, N, Polishchuk, I, Lang, A, Portal, L, Dejoie, C, Katsman, A and Pokroy, B (2022) High-Mg calcite nanoparticles within a low-Mg calcite matrix: A widespread phenomenon in biomineralization. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 119(16).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bicho, N and Haws, J (2008) At the land’s end: Marine resources and the importance of fluctuations in the coastline in the prehistoric hunter–gatherer economy of Portugal. Quaternary Science Reviews 27(23–24), 21662175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bicho, N, Manne, T, Marreiros, J, Cascalheira, J, Pereira, T, Tátá, F, Évora, M, Gonçalves, C and Infantini, L (2013) The ecodynamics of the first modern humans in Southwestern Iberia: The case of Vale Boi, Portugal. Quaternary International 318, 102116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bosch, MD, Mannino, MA, Prendergast, AL, O’Connell, TC, Demarchi, B, Taylor, SM, Niven, L, van der Plicht, J and Hublin, JJ (2015) New chronology for Ksar 'Akil (Lebanon) supports Levantine route of modern human dispersal into Europe. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112(25), 76837688.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Braadbaart, F, Reidsma, FH, Roebroeks, W, Chiotti, L, Slon, V, Meyer, M, Théry-Parisot, I, van Hoesel, A, Nierop, KGJ, Kaal, J and van Os, B (2020) Heating histories and taphonomy of ancient fireplaces: A multi-proxy case study from the Upper Palaeolithic sequence of Abri Pataud (Les Eyzies-de-tayac, France). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 33, 102468.Google Scholar
Brock, F, Higham, T, Ditchfield, P and Bronk Ramsey, C (2010) Current pretreatment methods for AMS radiocarbon dating at the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit (ORAU). Radiocarbon 52(1), 103112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, SD, Chiavari, G, Ediger, V, Fabbri, D, Gaines, AF, Galletti, G, Karayigit, AI, Love, GD, Snape, CE, Sirkecioglu, O and Toprak, S. (2000) Black Sea sapropels: Relationship to kerogens and fossil fuel precursors. Fuel 79(14),17251742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brumm, A, Hakim, B, Ramli, M, Aubert, M, van den Bergh, GD, Li, B, Burhan, B, Saiful, AM, Siagian, L, Sardi, R and Jusdi, A (2018) A reassessment of the early archaeological record at leang burung 2, a late pleistocene rock-shelter site on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. PLoS One 13(4), e0193025.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Busschers, F, Wesselingh, F, Kars, R, Versluijs-Helder, M, Wallinga, J, Bosch, J, Timmner, J, Nierop, K, Meijer, T and Bunnik, F (2014) Radiocarbon dating of late pleistocene marine shells from the Southern North Sea. Radiocarbon 56(3), 11511166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butkus, L, Šapolaitė, J, Garbarienė, I, Garbaras, A, Bučinskas, L, Pabedinskas, A, Remeikis, V, Ežerinskis, Ž (2022) Development of graphitization method for low carbon aerosol filter samples with automated graphitization system AGE-3. Applied Radiation and Isotopes 190, 110461.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carriker, MR and Palmer, RE (1979) A new mineralized layer in the hinge of the oyster. Science 206(4419), 691693.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cascalheira, J, Bicho, N, Manne, T and Horta, P (2017) Cross-scale adaptive behaviors during the upper Paleolithic in Iberia: The example of Vale Boi (Southwestern Portugal). Quaternary International 446, 1730.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cascalheira, J, Bicho, N, Marreiros, J, Pereira, T, Évora, M, Cortés, M, Gibaja Bao, JF, Manne, T, Regala, F and Gonçalves, C (2012) Vale Boi (Algarve, Portugal) and the Solutrean in Southwestern Iberia Vale Boi (Algarve, Portugal) y el solutrense en el suroeste de la península Ibérica.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chappell, J and Polach, HA (1972) Some effects of partial recrystallisation on 14C dating late pleistocene corals and molluscs. Quaternary Research 2(2), 244252.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Checa, AG, Jiménez-López, C, Rodríguez-Navarro, A and Machado, JP (2007) Precipitation of aragonite by calcitic bivalves in Mg-enriched marine waters. Marine Biology 150(5), 819827.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Çoban-Yıldız, Y, Fabbri, D, Baravelli, V, Vassura, I, Yılmaz, A, Tuğrul, S and Eker-Develi, E (2006) Analytical pyrolysis of suspended particulate organic matter from the Black Sea water column. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography 53(17), 18561874.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dee, MW, Palstra, SWL, Aerts-Bijma, AT, Bleeker, MO, de Bruijn, S, Ghebru, F, Jansen, HG, Kuitems, M, Paul, D, Richie, RR and Spriensma, JJ (2019) Radiocarbon dating at groningen: New and updated chemical pretreatment procedures. Radiocarbon 62(1), 6374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diez-Quijada, L, De Oliveira, FL, Jos, Á, Cameán, AM, Aparicio-Ruiz, R, Vasconcelos, V, Campos, A, González-Vila, FJ and González-Pérez, JA (2020) Alterations in Mediterranean mussel (Mytilus galloprovincialis) composition exposed to cyanotoxins as revealed by analytical pyrolysis. Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis 152, 104970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Döbelin, N and Kleeberg, R (2015) Profex: A graphical user interface for the rietveld refinement program BGMN. Journal of Applied Crystallography 48, 15731580.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douka, K (2011) An Upper Palaeolithic shell scraper from Ksar Akil (Lebanon). Journal of Archaeological Science 38(2), 429437.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douka, K, Bergman, CA, Hedges, RE, Wesselingh, FP and Higham, TF (2013) Chronology of Ksar Akil (Lebanon) and implications for the colonization of Europe by Anatomically Modern Humans. PLoS One 8(9), e72931.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Douka, K, Hedges, RE and Higham, TFJR (2010a) Improved AMS 14C dating of shell carbonates using high-precision X-ray diffraction and a novel density separation protocol (CarDS). Radiocarbon 52(2), 735751.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douka, K, Higham, TF and Hedges, RE (2010b) Radiocarbon dating of shell carbonates: Old problems and new solutions. Munibe 31, 1827.Google Scholar
Elliot, M, Welsh, K, Chilcott, C, McCulloch, M, Chappell, J and Ayling, B (2009) Profiles of trace elements and stable isotopes derived from giant long-lived Tridacna gigas bivalves: Potential applications in paleoclimate studies. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 280(1), 132142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
England, J, Dyke, AS, Coulthard, RD, McNeely, R and Aitken, A (2013) The exaggerated radiocarbon age of deposit-feeding molluscs in calcareous environments. Boreas 42(2), 362373.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fahrni, S, Wacker, L, Synal, H-A and Szidat, S (2013) Improving a gas ion source for 14C AMS. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 294, 320327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Faivre, S, Bakran-Petricioli, T, Barešić, J, Horvatinčić, N (2015) New data on marine radiocarbon reservoir effect in the eastern Adriatic based on pre-bomb marine organisms from the intertidal zone and shallow sea. Radiocarbon 57(4), 527538.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falini, G, Reggi, M, Fermani, S, Sparla, F, Goffredo, S, Dubinsky, Z, Levi, O, Dauphin, Y and Cuif, J-P (2013) Control of aragonite deposition in colonial corals by intra-skeletal macromolecules. Journal of Structural Biology 183(2), 226238.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ferro-Vázquez, C, Kaal, J, Arévalo, FJS and Boado, FC (2019) Molecular fingerprinting of 14C dated soil organic matter fractions from archaeological settings in NW Spain. Radiocarbon 61(1), 101130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fewlass, H, Talamo, S, Tuna, T, Fagault, Y, Kromer, B, Hoffmann, H, Pangrazzi, C, Hublin, J-J and Bard, E (2017) Size matters: Radiocarbon dates of <200 µg ancient collagen samples with AixMICADAS and its gas ion source. Radiocarbon 60(2), 425439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fewlass, H, Tuna, T, Fagault, Y, Hublin, JJ, Kromer, B, Bard, E and Talamo, S (2019) Pretreatment and gaseous radiocarbon dating of 4–100 mg archaeological bone. Scientific Reports 9(1), 5342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gillespie, R, Hedges, RE and Humm, M (1986) Routine ams dating of bone and shell proteins. Radiocarbon 28(2A), 451456.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gillikin, DP, Lorrain, A, Bouillon, S, Willenz, P and Dehairs, F (2006) Stable carbon isotopic composition of Mytilus edulis shells: Relation to metabolism, salinity, δ13CDIC and phytoplankton. Organic Geochemistry 37(10), 13711382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, BE and Smith, AM (2004) Mineralogical variation in shells of the blackfoot abalone, Haliotis iris (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Haliotidae), in Southern New Zealand. Pacific Science 58(1), 4764.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guzmán, N, Dauphin, Y, Cuif, JP, Denis, A and Ortlieb, L (2009) Diagenetic changes in Concholepas concholepas shells (Gastropoda, Muricidae) in the hyper-arid conditions of Northern Chile – implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions. Biogeosciences 6(2), 197207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hadden, CS, Loftis, KM and Cherkinsky, A (2018) Carbon isotopes (δ13C and δ14C) in shell carbonate, conchiolin, and soft tissues in eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica). Radiocarbon 60(4), 11251137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hadden, CS, Loftis, KM, Cherkinsky, A, Ritchison, BT, Lulewicz, IH and Thompson, VD (2019) Radiocarbon in marsh periwinkle (Littorina irrorata) conchiolin: Applications for archaeology. Radiocarbon 61(5), 14891500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hublin, J-J (2012) The earliest modern human colonization of Europe. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109(34), 1347113472.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jones, DS and Allmon, WD (1995) Records of upwelling, seasonality and growth in stable-isotope profiles of pliocene mollusk shells from Florida. Lethaia 28(1), 6174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindauer, S (2019) Radiocarbon reservoir effects on shells from SE Arabia in the context of paleoenvironmental studies. PhD thesis, Technical University Darmstadt.Google Scholar
Lindauer, S, Hadden, CS, Macario, K and Guilderson, TP (2021) Marine biogenic carbonates and radiocarbon—a retrospective on shells and corals with an outlook on challenges and opportunities. Radiocarbon. doi:10.1017/RDC.2021.93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ma, Y, Aichmayer, B, Paris, O, Fratzl, P, Meibom, A, Metzler, RA, Politi, Y, Addadi, L, Gilbert, PUPA and Weiner, S (2009) The grinding tip of the sea urchin tooth exhibits exquisite control over calcite crystal orientation and Mg distribution. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106(15), 60486053.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ma, Y, Cohen, SR, Addadi, L and Weiner, S (2008) Sea urchin tooth design: An “all-calcite” polycrystalline reinforced fiber composite for grinding rocks. Advanced Materials 20(8), 15551559.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manne, T (2014) Early upper paleolithic bone processing and insights into small-scale storage of fats at Vale Boi, Southern Iberia. Journal of Archaeological Science 43, 111123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manne, T, Cascalheira, J, Évora, M, Marreiros, J and Bicho, N (2012) Intensive subsistence practices at Vale Boi, an upper paleolithic site in Southwestern Portugal. Quaternary International 264, 8399.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marin, F, Le Roy, N and Marie, B (2012) The formation and mineralization of mollusk shell. Frontiers in Bioscience 4(1099), 125.Google ScholarPubMed
Marreiros, J, Bicho, N, Gibaja, J, Pereira, T and Cascalheira, J (2015) Lithic technology from the gravettian of Vale Boi: New insights into Early Upper Paleolithic human behavior in Southern Iberian Peninsula. Quaternary International 359–360, 479498.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McConnaughey, TA and Gillikin, DP (2008) Carbon isotopes in mollusk shell carbonates. Geo-Marine Letters 28, 287299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milano, S and Nehrke, G (2018) Microstructures in relation to temperature-induced aragonite-to-calcite transformation in the marine gastropod Phorcus turbinatus . PLoS One 13(10), e0204577.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Milano, S, Schöne, BR, González-Morales, MR and Gutiérrez-Zugasti, I (2022) Temporal and spatial variability of prehistoric aquatic resource procurement: A case study from Mesolithic Northern Iberia. Scientific Reports 12(1).CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Milano, S, Schöne, BR and Gutiérrez-Zugasti, I (2020) Oxygen and carbon stable isotopes of Mytilus galloprovincialis Lamarck, 1819 shells as environmental and provenance proxies. The Holocene 30(1), 6576.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Němec, M, Wacker, L and Gäggeler, H (2010) Optimization of the graphitization process at AGE-1. Radiocarbon 52(3), 13801393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ono, R, Soegondho, S and Yoneda, M (2009) Changing marine exploitation during late pleistocene In Northern Wallacea: Shell remains from Leang Sarru rockshelter in Talaud islands. Asian Perspectives 48(2), 318341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Penkman, KEH, Kaufman, DS, Maddy, D and Collins, MJ (2008) Closed-system behaviour of the intra-crystalline fraction of amino acids in mollusc shells. Quaternary Geochronology 3(1–2), 225.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pereira, T, Bicho, N, Cascalheira, J, Infantini, L, Marreiros, J, Paixão, E and Terradas, X (2016) Territory and abiotic resources between 33 and 15.6 ka at Vale Boi (SW Portugal). Quaternary International 412, 124134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perrin, C (2004) Early diagenesis of carbonate biocrystals: Isomineralogical changes in aragonite coral skeletons. Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France 175(2), 95106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philippsen, B (2013) The freshwater reservoir effect in radiocarbon dating. Heritage Science 1(1), 24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pigati, JS (2002) On correcting 14C ages of gastropod shell carbonate for fractionation. Radiocarbon 44(3), 755760.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Polishchuk, I, Bracha, AA, Bloch, L, Levy, D, Kozachkevich, S, Etinger-Geller, Y, Kauffmann, Y, Burghammer, M, Giacobbe, C, Villanova, J and Hendler, G (2017) Coherently aligned nanoparticles within a biogenic single crystal: A biological prestressing strategy. Science 358(6368), 12941298.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramos-Muñoz, J, Cantillo-Duarte, JJ, Bernal-Casasola, D, Barrena-Tocino, A, Domínguez-Bella, S, Vijande-Vila, E, Clemente-Conte, I, Gutiérrez-Zugasti, I, Soriguer-Escofet, M and Almisas-Cruz, S (2016) Early use of marine resources by Middle/Upper Pleistocene human societies: The case of Benzú rockshelter (Northern Africa). Quaternary International 407, 615.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reggi, M, Fermani, S, Landi, V, Sparla, F, Caroselli, E, Gizzi, F, Dubinsky, Z, Levy, O, Cuif, J-P, Dauphin, Y and Goffredo, S (2014) Biomineralization in Mediterranean corals: The role of the intraskeletal organic matrix. Crystal Growth Design 14(9), 43104320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ and Reimer, RW (2001) A marine reservoir correction database and on-line interface. Radiocarbon 43(2A), 461463.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, RW and Reimer, PJ (2017) An online application for δR calculation. Radiocarbon 59(5), 16231627.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruff, M, Fahrni, S, Gäggeler, HW, Hajdas, I, Suter, M, Synal, HA, Szidat, S and Wacker, L (2010) On-line radiocarbon measurements of small samples using elemental analyzer and MICADAS gas ion source. Radiocarbon 52(4), 16451656.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruff, M, Wacker, L, Gäggeler, HW, Suter, M, Synal, H-A and Szidat, S (2007) A gas ion source for radiocarbon measurements at 200 kv. Radiocarbon 49(2), 307314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, N, Cook, GT, Ascough, P, Barrett, JH and Dugmore, A (2011) Species specific marine radiocarbon reservoir effect: A comparison of δR values between Patella vulgata (limpet) shell carbonate and Gadus morhua (Atlantic cod) bone collagen. Journal of Archaeological Science 38(5), 10081015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russo, CM, Tripp, JA, Douka, K and Higham, TFJR (2010) A new radiocarbon pretreatment method for molluscan shell using density fractionation of carbonates in bromoform. Radiocarbon 52(3), 13011311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sadler, J, Carré, M, Azzoug, M, Schauer, AJ, Ledesma, J, Cardenas, F, Chase, BM, Bentaleb, I, Muller, SD, Mandeng, M and Rohling, EJ (2012) Reconstructing past upwelling intensity and the seasonal dynamics of primary productivity along the Peruvian coastline from mollusk shell stable isotopes. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 13(1).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saiz-Jimenez, C. 1995. The origin of alkylbenzenes and thiophenes in pyrolysates of geochemical samples. Organic Geochemistry 23(1), 8185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Santhanam, R (2018a) Biology and Ecology of Edible Marine Bivalve Molluscs. CRC Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Santhanam, R (2018b) Biology and Ecology of Edible Marine Gastropod Molluscs. CRC Press.Google Scholar
Santos, GM, Southon, JR, Druffel-Rodriguez, KC, Griffin, S and Mazon, M (2004) Magnesium perchlorate as an alternative water trap in AMS graphite sample preparation: A report on sample preparation at KCCAMS at the University of California, Irvine. Radiocarbon 46(1), 165173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schöne, BR (2008) The curse of physiology—challenges and opportunities in the interpretation of geochemical data from mollusk shells. Geo-Marine Letters 28, 269285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schöne, BR, Freyre Castro, AD, Fiebig, J, Houk, SD, Oschmann, W and Kröncke, I (2004) Sea surface water temperatures over the period 1884–1983 reconstructed from oxygen isotope ratios of a bivalve mollusk shell (Arctica islandica, Southern North Sea). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 212(3), 215232.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schöne, BR, Schmitt, K and Maus, M (2017) Effects of sample pretreatment and external contamination on bivalve shell and carrara marble δ18O and δ13C signatures. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 484, 2232.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solís, C, Chávez, E, Ortiz, M, Andrade, E, Ortíz, E, Szidat, S and Wacker, L (2015) AMS-C14 analysis of graphite obtained with an automated graphitization equipment (AGE III) from aerosol collected on quartz filters. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 361, 419422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stenzel, H (1963) Aragonite and calcite as constituents of adult oyster shells. Science 142(3589), 232233.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Talamo, S, Fewlass, H, Maria, R and Jaouen, K (2021. “Here we go again”: The inspection of collagen extraction protocols for 14C dating and palaeodietary analysis. STAR: Science & Technology of Archaeological Research 7(1), 6277.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Talamo, S and Richards, M (2011. A comparison of bone pretreatment methods for AMS dating of samples >30,000 BP. Radiocarbon. 53(3):443449.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tassoni, L, Kromer, B, Friedrich, R, Wacker, L, Cattani, M, Friedrich, M, Paleček, D, Pelloni, E, Peng, K and Thomas, ME (2023) Safe preparation and delivery of graphite targets for 14C analysis: Procedures of BRAVHO lab at Bologna University. Radiocarbon. doi:10.1017/RDC.2023.43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tátá, F, Cascalheira, J, Marreiros, J, Pereira, T and Bicho, N (2014) Shell bead production in the Upper Paleolithic of Vale Boi (SW Portugal): An experimental perspective. Journal of Archaeological Science 42, 2941.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toffolo, MB (2021) The significance of aragonite in the interpretation of the microscopic archaeological record. Geoarchaeology 36(1), 149169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turekian, KK and Armstrong, RL (1960) Magnesium, strontium, and barium concentrations and calcite-aragonite ratios of some recent molluscan shells. Journal of Marine Research 18(3).Google Scholar
Vita-Finzi, C and Roberts, N (1984) Selective leaching of shells for 14C dating. Radiocarbon 26(1), 5458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wacker, L, Bonani, G, Friedrich, M, Hajdas, I, Kromer, B, NÏmec, M, Ruff, M, Suter, M, Synal, H and Vockenhuber, C (2010a) MICADAS: Routine and high-precision radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon 52(2–3), 252262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wacker, L, Fahrni, SM, Hajdas, I, Molnar, M, Synal, HA, Szidat, S and Zhang, YL (2013) A versatile gas interface for routine radiocarbon analysis with a gas ion source. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 294, 315319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wacker, L, Němec, M and Bourquin, J (2010b) A revolutionary graphitisation system: Fully automated, compact and simple. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 268(7–8), 931934.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Webb, GE, Price, GJ, Nothdurft, LD, Deer, L and Rintoul, L (2007) Cryptic meteoric diagenesis in freshwater bivalves: Implications for radiocarbon dating. Geology 35(9).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Will, M, Kandel, AW and Conard, NJ (2019. Midden or molehill: The role of coastal adaptations in human evolution and dispersal. Journal of World Prehistory 32(1), 3372.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wohlfarth, B, Skog, G, Possnert, G and Holmquist, B (1998) Pitfalls in the AMS radiocarbon-dating of terrestrial macrofossils. Journal of Quaternary Science 13, 137145.3.0.CO;2-6>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zilhão, J, Angelucci, DE, Badal-García, E, D’Errico, F, Daniel, F, Dayet, L, Douka, K, Higham, TFG, Martínez-Sánchez, MJ, Montes-Bernárdez, R and Murcia-Mascarós, S (2010) Symbolic use of marine shells and mineral pigments by Iberian Neandertals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107(3), 10231028.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Previous dates on samples from the Terrace area of the Vale Boi site

Figure 1

Figure 1. The samples used in this study shown as red dots in their sampling positions within each archeological layer in the Terrace area of the Vale Boi site.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Summary and comparison of the four methods tested, with red crosses for steps not performed.

Figure 3

Table 2. Information on the Archeological samples used in the experiments. The end weight and radiocarbon age are shown as the Soluble/Insoluble fraction for Methods A and B, as Aragonite/calcite for Method C, and for Method D as the whole carbonate fraction

Figure 4

Table 3. Percentages of calcite and aragonite before and after the application of Method C to archeological shells. Whole—percentages before separation; Aragonite/calcite—the two resulting fractions which presumably are either aragonite or calcite. The two columns showing the weight percentage of calcite/aragonite are the results of XRD pattern analysis, showing actual percentages obtained in the separated fractions

Figure 5

Figure 3. XRD patterns of the “calcite” (left) and “aragonite” (right) fractions after separation using Method C. The samples are positioned along the vertical axis to differentiate them from one another.

Figure 6

Figure 4. MS-pyrograms from Py-GC-MS of the insoluble fraction of archaeological samples. The molecular structures were reported for some of the most intense peaks. CS2: carbon disulphide; PA: palmitic acid; SA: stearic acid; S: squalene; (o): alkenes; (▪): alkanes.

Figure 7

Figure 5. A graph showing the radiocarbon age (X-axis) resulting from the four different methods applied on shells with different shapes indicating different shell samples used (Layer 3: BRA 4930 triangle; BRA 4931 circle; Layer 4: BRA 4942 diamond; BRA 4938 inverted triangle; BRA 4936 triangle; BRA 4943 circle; Layer 5: BRA 4946 circle; Layer 6: BRA 4952 circle; Layer 7: BRA 4956 triangle; BRA 4957 circle) and previous results from charcoal, bones and shells (squares) from five different archaeological layers (Y-axis). The error bars (±1σ) are shown within the symbols for most samples, given the large scale of the graph, and the tightness of the error range.

Supplementary material: File

Paleček et al. supplementary material

Paleček et al. supplementary material
Download Paleček et al. supplementary material(File)
File 3.2 MB