Characterisation and blind testing of radiocarbon dating of cremated bone |
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Authors: | Jesper Olsen Jan Heinemeier Pia Bennike Cille Krause Karen Margrethe Hornstrup Henrik Thrane |
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Affiliation: | 1. AMS 14C Dating Centre, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus, Denmark;2. Laboratory of Biological Anthropology, Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Copenhagen, DK-2200 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark;3. Roskilde Museum, Sankt Ols Gade 15, DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark;4. Department of Prehistoric Archaeology, Moesgaard, Aarhus University, DK-8270 Hoejbjerg, Denmark |
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Abstract: | The success of radiocarbon dating of burned or cremated bones depends on the exposed temperature during burning and the degree of re-crystallisation of the inorganic bone matrix. We present a method for characterisation of likely cremated bones by employing visual inspection, infrared spectrometry and carbon stable isotope analysis on the bio-apatite fraction. The method of radiocarbon dating of cremated bones was tested by dating paired samples of bone and associated context materials such as pitch, charcoal and a dendrochronologically dated oak coffin. The dating of these paired test samples were largely performed as blind tests and showed excellent agreement between pitch and bone. The weighted mean age difference of all test samples is observed to −9 ± 60 14C yr. To test the indicators and the effects of the degree of burning, a Late-Neolithic human individual has been studied, as this individual exhibits the full spectrum from low temperature burning (charred) to high temperature (“cremated”) from one end of a single bone to the other. This is reflected as a marked step in numerous parameters as well as in a significant difference in 14C age between the charred and the cremated bone samples. |
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Keywords: | Cremated bones Stable isotopes Radiocarbon dating IR spectroscopy Sample preparation |
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