Extension of the 14C Calibration Curve to ca. 40,000 cal BC by Synchronizing Greenland 18O/16O Ice Core Records and North Atlantic Foraminifera Profiles: A Comparison with U/Th Coral Data
Issue Date
1998-01-01Keywords
GRIPDeep Sea Drilling Project
DSDP Site 609
IPOD
Leg 104
Leg 94
Ocean Drilling Program
ODP Site 644
V23 81
O 18 O 16
Th U
Arctic region
Greenland
Anthozoa
Coelenterata
GISP2
ice cores
Atlantic Ocean
North Atlantic
calibration
oxygen
Foraminifera
Protista
isotope ratios
microfossils
Pleistocene
time scales
Cenozoic
Quaternary
C 14
carbon
isotopes
radioactive isotopes
Invertebrata
stable isotopes
absolute age
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Jöris, O., & Weninger, B. (1998). Extension of the 14C calibration curve to ca. 40,000 cal BC by synchronizing Greenland 180/16O ice core records and North Atlantic foraminifera profiles: A comparison with U/Th coral data. Radiocarbon, 40(1), 495-504.Journal
RadiocarbonDescription
From the 16th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Gronigen, Netherlands, June 16-20, 1997.Additional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
For a better understanding of pre-Holocene cultural history, archaeologists are in need of an absolute time scale that can be confirmed and duplicated by different dating methods. Proxy data available from archaeological sites do not, in themselves, allow much reflection on absolute age. Even when founded on supporting radiocarbon data, Paleolithic chronologies that are beyond the actual limits of 14C calibration still remain relative ones, and thus are often quite tentative. Lacking the possibility of calibration for the Paleolithic, archaeologists often attempt to correlate their data with different time scales from different archives that are thought to be absolute or calendric. The main result of this paper is that the GISP2 and U/Th chronologies duplicate each other over their entire range of data overlap, while other time scales (i.e., GRIP, most varve sites) differ significantly. The context-derived 14C calibration curve provides a large potential to correlate the various climate archives as recorded in ice cores and deep ocean drillings with terrestrial sequences.Type
Proceedingstext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200018373