Issue Date
2002-01-01Keywords
ironChurchdown England
Frobisher Bay
Gloucestershire England
Kodlunarn Island
steel
artifacts
accelerator mass spectra
Atlantic Ocean
North Atlantic
England
mass spectra
spectra
archaeology
Great Britain
United Kingdom
Holocene
metals
Europe
Western Europe
Cenozoic
Quaternary
methods
C 14
carbon
isotopes
radioactive isotopes
absolute age
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Craddock, P. T., Wayman, M. L., & Jull, A. J. T. (2002). The radiocarbon dating and authentication of iron artifacts. Radiocarbon, 44(3), 717-732.Journal
RadiocarbonAdditional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
The continuing improvements in accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dating technology mean that it is possible to work on ever smaller samples, which in turn, make an ever wider range of sample potentially available for dating. This paper discusses some of the difficulties arising with the interpretation of AMS dates obtained from carbon in iron. The overriding problem is that the carbon, now in chemical combination with the iron, could have come from a variety of sources with very different origins. These are now potentially an irresolvable mixture in the iron. For iron made over the last millennium, there are the additional problems associated with the use of both fossil fuel and biomass fuel in different stages of the iron making, leading to great confusion, especially with authenticity studies.Type
Articletext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200032173