Apparent Ages of Marine Shells: Implications for Archaeological Dating in Hawai'i
Author
Dye, TomIssue Date
1994-01-01Keywords
HawaiiEast Pacific Ocean Islands
Oceania
Polynesia
relative age
marine environment
accuracy
archaeological sites
stratigraphy
United States
Cenozoic
charcoal
Quaternary
C 14
carbon
dates
isotopes
radioactive isotopes
shells
absolute age
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Dye, T. (1994). Apparent ages of marine shells: Implications for archaeological dating in Hawai'i. Radiocarbon, 36(1), 51-57.Journal
RadiocarbonAdditional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
The conventional 14C ages of 8 marine shells of known age and 11 marine shells stratigraphically associated with dated wood charcoal show considerable variation from expected ages. One source of this variation is seashore geology; comparison of 6 AMS dates on 3 species of shallow-water, herbivorous gastropod shells from Pleistocene limestone and Holocene volcanic coasts shows that shells from Pleistocene limestone coasts can have apparent, or reservoir, 14C ages up to 620 yr greater than shells of the same species from volcanic coasts. The relatively great variation in apparent ages of Hawaiian marine shells poses problems for their use in dating archaeological sites. For best results, an archaeological marine shell should be sourced to a particular local environment, and the apparent age of shells in that environment determined by dating well-provenienced shells of known age.Type
Articletext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200014326
