Abstract
Radiocarbon (C-14) results on cremated bone are frequently published in high-ranking journals, but C-14 laboratories employ different pretreatment methods as they have divergent perceptions of what sources of contaminants might be present. We found pretreatment protocols to vary significantly between three laboratories (Brussels [RICH], Kid [KIA], and Groningen [CIO]), which all have a long history of dating cremated bone. We present a case study of 6 sets of replicate dates, to compare laboratory pretreatment protocols, and a further 16 sets of inter-laboratory replicate measurements, which compare specific steps of the conversion and measuring process. The C-14 results showed dates to be reproducible between the laboratories and consistent with the expected archaeological chronology. We found that differences in pretreatment, conversion to CO2 and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) measurement to have no measurable influence on the majority of obtained results, suggesting that any possible diagenesis was probably restricted to the most soluble
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1581-1591 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Radiocarbon |
Volume | 61 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Oct-2019 |
Event | 23rd International Radiocarbon Conference - Trondheim, Norway Duration: 17-Jun-2018 → 22-Jun-2018 |
Keywords
- comparing laboratory methods
- cremated bone
- radiocarbon dating
- replicate measurements
- CALCINED BONES
- C-14
- APATITE
- CARBON
- ORIGIN
- IMPACT
- AGE